| Page 585 533 A.2d 585  56 USLW 2263, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
93,503,
13 Del. J. Corp. L. 683 IVANHOE PARTNERS, a Texas general
partnership and Ivanhoe
Acquisition Corporation, a Delaware
corporation, Plaintiffs,
v.
NEWMONT MINING CORPORATION, a Delaware
corporation, Randolph
I.J. Agnew, Joseph P. Flannery, Edward P.
Fontaine, Thomas
B. Holmes, Richard B. Leather, William B.
Moses, Jr., Gordon
R. Parker, Robin A. Plumbridge, William I.M.
Turner, Jr.,
Consolidated Gold Fields PLC, a United
Kingdom corporation,
Gold Fields American Corporation, a Delaware
corporation,
and the Special Purpose, Inc., a Delaware
corporation, Defendants.
The First Boston Corporation, New York Stock
Exchange, Inc.,
and National Securities Clearing
Corporation, Intervenors.
In re NEWMONT MINING CORP. SHAREHOLDERS
LITIGATION. Civ. A. Nos. 9281, 9221.
Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: Oct. 1, 1987.
Decided: Oct. 15, 1987.
Page 588
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 687] Charles
F. Richards, Jr., (argued), Samuel A. Nolen,
William J. Wade, C. Stephen Bigler, Gregory
P. Williams, Thomas A. Beck, and Anne F.
Bugg, of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, Baker & Botts, Houston, Tex.,
for plaintiffs Ivanhoe Partners and Ivanhoe
Acquisition Corp.
Joseph A. Rosenthal of Morris,
Rosenthal, Monhait & Gross, P.A.,
Wilmington, Goodkind, Weschler, Labaton &
Rudoff, New York City, Robert A. Skirnick,
(argued), and John Halebian, of Wolf Popper
Ross Wolf & Jones, New York City, Roger
Kirby, of Kaufman Malchman Kaufmann & Kirby,
New York City, David J. Bershad, of Milberg
Weiss Bershad Specthrie & Lerach, New York
City, for class plaintiffs in Consol. Civ.
A. No. 9221.
Michael D. Goldman, Charles S.
Crompton, Jr., Donald J. Wolfe, Jr., and
Richard L. Horwitz, of Potter Anderson &
Corroon, Wilmington, Bernard W. Nussbaum,
Theodore N. Mirvis (argued), and Paul K.
Rowe, of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New
York City, Richard Hollwell, of White &
Case, New York City, for defendants Newmont
Mining Corp., Gordon R. Parker, Edward P.
Fontaine, and Richard B. Leather.
John Hall, of Debevoise &
Plimpton, New York City, for defendants
Independent Directors of Newmont Mining
Corp.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III,
Lawrence A. Hamermesh, and Kenneth Nachbar,
of Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, Lewis A. Kaplan (argued), Moses
Silverman, Colleen McMahon, Abby Jennis,
Clyde Allison, and Mary Crawley, of Paul,
Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, New York
City, for defendants Consol. Gold Fields
PLC, Gold Fields American Corp., and the
Special Purpose, Inc.
Rodman Ward, Jr. and Edward P.
Welch, of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, Wilmington, [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 688]
Ann Crawford, of Skadden, Arps, Slate,
Meagher & Flom, New York City, for
intervenor, The First Boston Corp.
Donald Elihu Evans, of Bryde,
Ament & Evans, and Milbank, Tweed, Hadley &
McCloy, New York City, for intervenors, The
New York Stock Exchange and The Nat.
Securities Clearing Corp.
OPINION
JACOBS, Vice Chancellor.
The pending motion for a
preliminary injunction involves a challenge
under Delaware
Page 589 law to an antitakeover defense some times
picturesquely described as a "street sweep."
That sobriquet is used by cognoscienti in
the esoteric field of corporate takeovers to
refer to a rapid accumulation of a large
block of target corporation's stock, through
open market or privately negotiated
purchases or a combination of both. Until
now the validity of "street sweeps" which
facilitate or impede a hostile takeover has
been decided under federal law. Recent
federal court challenges of street sweeps
have met with little success.
1
Insofar as this Court is aware, no street
sweep has previously been challenged under
Delaware corporate fiduciary principles.
The present challenge arises in
the following circumstances: a hostile
tender offeror (here, Ivanhoe Partners and
Ivanhoe Acquisition Corporation, referred to
collectively as "Ivanhoe"), owns
approximately 10% of the stock of the target
corporation (here Newmont Mining
Corporation, referred to as "Newmont"). Both
Ivanhoe and a class of Newmont shareholders
seek injunctive relief against a street
sweep conducted by the target corporation's
largest (26.2%) stockholder (here
Consolidated Gold Fields PLC and its
subsidiaries, Gold Fields American
Corporation and The Special Purpose, Inc.,
referred to collectively as "Gold Fields").
The street sweep, if allowed, would make
Gold Fields the 49.9% owner of Newmont's
shares which, [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 689] when
combined with the stock owned by Newmont's
directors, represents a majority of
Newmont's outstanding shares. The street
sweep would also assure the defeat of
Ivanhoe's tender offer, which is conditioned
upon Ivanhoe owning 51% of Newmont's stock.
The street sweep was conducted with the
knowledge and nonopposition of Newmont's
Board of Directors, and will be financed in
major part by a substantial dividend that
Newmont intends to pay to all shareholders,
including Ivanhoe.
Gold Fields' present 49.7% stock
interest, including the 23% block it
acquired in the street sweep, was made
subject to certain restrictions on voting
and transfer. Those restrictions were
imposed by a standstill agreement entered
into between Newmont and Gold Fields the day
before the street sweep. Those restrictions,
it is claimed, will entrench Newmont's Board
of Directors and preclude any future
takeover bid for Newmont. On that and other
grounds it is argued that the defensive
measures adopted by the defendants
constitute inequitable entrenchment devices
in violation of the defendants' fiduciary
duties under Delaware law.
For the reasons now stated, I
conclude preliminarily that, except in one
particular, the challenged transactions have
not been shown to violate any Delaware law
or fiduciary principle. I further conclude
that in the peculiar circumstances of this
case, no preliminary injunctive relief is
required.
I. PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This preliminary injunction
motion comes to be heard after frenetic and
intense activity over an extremely short
period--10 days from the filing of the
complaint to the oral argument. During that
intervening period two temporary restraining
order motions were heard and decided.
In early September of this year,
prompted by Newmont's opposition to
Ivanhoe's takeover bid, numerous class
action lawsuits were filed on behalf of
Newmont stockholders, against Newmont, its
directors, and Gold Fields. On September 17,
1987, those class actions were consolidated
into Civil Action No. 9221.
On the morning of September 22,
1987, in response to a public announcement
that Gold Fields would seek to acquire an
additional 23% of Newmont's publicly held
stock, Ivanhoe filed Civil Action No. 9281
Page 590 against Newmont, its directors, and Gold
Fields, and immediately moved for a
temporary restraining order and a
preliminary injunction to prohibit Gold
Fields from making those purchases. [13 Del.
J. Corp. L. 690] Ivanhoe's motion for a
temporary restraining order (of which notice
was duly given) was argued at 2:00 p.m. that
same afternoon. The following morning, the
Court entered an order temporarily
restraining Gold Fields from purchasing
additional Newmont stock. By that point Gold
Fields had bought all but a small fraction
of the desired 23% block. Although not yet
consummated, those purchases were to
"settle" early the following week.
On the motion for a temporary
restraining order, the record, while
skeletal, did indicate that the "street
sweep" would make Gold Fields the owner of
49.7% of Newmont. It further appeared that
Gold Fields' open market purchases, besides
defeating the Ivanhoe offer, might also
operate to entrench Newmont's Board and
render Newmont "takeover proof" for up to 10
years, because of certain provisions in a
standstill agreement between Gold Fields and
Newmont. That agreement required Gold Fields
to vote its Newmont stock for Newmont's
director nominees, and substantially
restricted Gold Fields' ability to transfer
its Newmont shares to a third party free of
the standstill restrictions. The Court ruled
that on the limited record before it, those
actions were "sufficiently indicative of a
possible fiduciary violation by Newmont's
directors (aided and abetted by Gold Fields)
and of imminent irreparable harm as would
justify a temporary restraining order."
Ivanhoe Partners, et al. v. Newmont Mining
Corporation, et al., Del.Ch.C.A. No. 9281,
Jacobs, V.C. (September 28, 1987), at 3-4.
When the temporary restraining
order was entered, Ivanhoe moved to enlarge
the order to prevent Gold Fields from
consummating the approximately $1.6 billion
of stock trades for which it had previously
contracted. That motion was briefed, and
then argued four days later, on Friday,
September 25, 1987. On Monday morning,
September 28, 1987, this Court issued its
Opinion denying Ivanhoe's motion, thereby
allowing Gold Fields to consummate the
contracted-for Newmont stock purchases.
However, the Court directed that those
shares not be voted and that they be either
"held separate" or placed into escrow,
pendente lite, conditioned upon Ivanhoe
agreeing not to take any further action
until this preliminary injunction motion was
decided, except to extend the duration of
its tender offer or complete financing
arrangements. (Ivanhoe Partners, et al. v.
Newmont Mining Corporation, et al., supra at
17; Order dated September 28, 1987.) Ivanhoe
agreed to that condition and Gold Fields
elected to hold separate its recently
purchased Newmont shares.
Three days later, on October 1,
1987, following expedited discovery and the
filing of extensive briefs, the motions for
a preliminary [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 691]
injunction were argued. This is the decision
of the Court on the plaintiffs' motions for
preliminary injunctive relief.
II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
2
Due to the nature and number of
issues presented (requiring almost 400 pages
of briefing), a somewhat extended treatment
of the factual background is appropriate.
All of the critical events took place over a
relatively short period--five weeks spanning
August 13 through September 22, 1987.
Newmont, a Delaware corporation
and diversified natural resources company,
is one of the largest producers of gold in
North America. Newmont has issued and
outstanding approximately 67 million shares
of common stock that are listed and traded
on the New York Stock Exchange. Newmont's
largest stockholder is Gold Fields, which,
prior to its stock purchases on September
21-22, 1987, owned 26.2% of Newmont's stock.
Gold Fields is a multinational
Page 591 producer of gold, with interests and
operations in South Africa, Australia, and
the United States. Gold Fields' principal
holding company, Consolidated Gold Fields
PLC, is a United Kingdom corporation.
Defendants Gold Fields American Corporation,
and The Special Purpose, Inc., both Delaware
corporations, are subsidiaries of
Consolidated Gold Fields PLC.
Newmont has a nine person Board
of Directors, consisting of three "inside"
directors who comprise Newmont's top
management, two directors who are affiliated
with Gold Fields, and four "outside"
directors who are not affiliated with either
Gold Fields' or Newmont management.
3
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 692] A.
Relationship Between Newmont and Gold Fields
To fully understand the present
controversy, a brief discussion of the
historical relationship between Newmont and
Gold Fields is helpful.
In 1981 Gold Fields began
acquiring Newmont stock. Gold Fields
disclosed that it intended to acquire at
least 25% but less than 50% of Newmont.
Newmont resisted by (among other things)
commencing litigation to block Gold Fields'
effort to purchase a significant stock
interest. Ultimately Newmont and Gold Fields
resolved their dispute by negotiating an
agreement pursuant to which Gold Fields
bought one million shares of stock directly
from Newmont, and thereafter increased its
stock interest by open market purchases to
26%.
Newmont and Gold Fields also
entered into a three-year standstill
agreement which was amended in 1983 (the
"1983 standstill agreement"). That agreement
contained several important provisions which
restricted Gold Fields' right to vote its
Newmont stockholdings and to transfer its
stock to a third party. Specifically, Gold
Fields was prohibited from acquiring more
than 33 1/3% of Newmont's stock at any time
before October 31, 1993 without the consent
of the Newmont Board. Gold Fields was also
generally limited to one third of the seats
on the Newmont Board, and the agreement
required that at least one more than the
number of Gold Fields directors had to be
independent. Gold Fields was required to
vote its shares for the Newmont's slate of
director-nominees, and was prohibited from
mounting a proxy contest in opposition to
Newmont's slate, so long as the Newmont
Board supported the Gold Fields nominees.
The 1983 standstill agreement also gave
Newmont a right of first refusal in the
event Gold Fields decided to sell its
Newmont stock. The term of the 1983
standstill agreement was until November 1,
1993 or until the happening of certain
earlier events, including a third party
acquiring 9.9% or more of Newmont stock. If
that latter event occurred, Gold Fields,
would be entitled unilaterally to terminate
the agreement by giving appropriate notice.
These arrangements governed the
legal relationship between Gold Fields and
Newmont until September 20, 1987. According
to the affidavits of Gold Fields officials,
the relationship between the two companies,
while acceptable, was not totally cordial.
Newmont's management apparently viewed Gold
Fields as an outsider having its own
separate agenda, and in the relationship
there was an element of mistrust. Although
Gold Fields had minority board
representation, its designees on the Newmont
Board were given no information other [13
Del. J. Corp. L. 693] than that received by
every other director. There was very little
operational contact between Newmont and Gold
Fields.
Page 592 Nonetheless, between 1983 and August 1987,
this alliance between the two companies
remained stable, and after 1983 it
apparently somewhat improved, as evidenced
by Gordon Parker, Newmont's Chairman,
becoming a member of Gold Fields' Board.
B. The Emergence of Ivanhoe
On August 13, 1987, Ivanhoe
disclosed in a Schedule 13D filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
("S.E.C.), that it had purchased
approximately 8.7% of Newmont's outstanding
shares. Plaintiff Ivanhoe Partners is a
Texas general partnership, and plaintiff
Ivanhoe Acquisition Corporation is a
Delaware corporation that was specially
formed to make a tender offer for Newmont
shares. Ivanhoe is controlled by certain
entities including Mesa Holding Limited
Partnership, which, in turn, is controlled
by Mr. T. Boone Pickens, Jr. When Ivanhoe
filed its Schedule 13D, Mr. Pickens, on
behalf of Ivanhoe, also sent letters to
Newmont's Gordon Parker and Gold Fields'
Rudolph I.J. Agnew, stating that Ivanhoe
would "welcome the opportunity to meet ...
to discuss alternatives for advancing the
interests of all parties." By letter dated
August 19, 1987, Mr. Agnew responded to Mr.
Pickens, stating that he did not believe
such a meeting would serve a useful purpose.
On August 18, 1987, Ivanhoe
publicly announced, through an amended
Schedule 13D filing, that it had increased
its stockholdings in Newmont to 9.95%. The
significance of that disclosure is that
Ivanhoe's new level of stock ownership
exceeded the 9.9% threshold which, once
crossed, would entitle Gold Fields to
terminate the 1983 standstill agreement
unilaterally, and (if it so chose) to pursue
control of Newmont either alone or in
alliance with Ivanhoe or some other bidder.
Both Newmont and Gold Fields were
acutely aware--and both acknowledged--that
by crossing the 9.9% threshold, Ivanhoe had
triggered Gold Fields' right to terminate
the 1983 standstill agreement and purchase
additional Newmont shares in the open
market.
4 That [13
Del. J. Corp. L. 694] same day (August 18)
the Newmont Board of Directors met and
discussed Gold Fields' position in the
matter. Mr. Agnew advised that Gold Fields
was prepared to support Newmont's management
in appropriate circumstances and at that
time would take no precipitate action that
might be viewed as hostile. But Mr. Agnew
cautioned that Gold Fields reserved the
right to act independently and in its own
interest, which might include "doing a deal
with Mr. Pickens." (Agnew Aff., p 7). In a
press release issued that same day, Gold
Fields disclosed that it had the right to
terminate the 1983 Standstill, but did not
intend to exercise that right "at this
time."
Ivanhoe's actions on and after
August 18, 1987 led to a series of defensive
reactions by Newmont
5
and Gold Fields, and countermoves by
Ivanhoe, all of which eventuated in the
transactions that are the subject of this
litigation. To appreciate the significance
of those actions and reactions, an
explanation of how Newmont and Gold Fields
each viewed the situation from its own
perspective is in order.
Newmont's directors perceived
that Ivanhoe, by triggering Gold Fields'
right to terminate the 1983 standstill
agreement, made Newmont and its public
shareholders immediately vulnerable to a
dual risk. The risk was that Ivanhoe, or
Gold Fields, or
Page 593 both acting in concert, would acquire
majority stock control of Newmont, leaving
Newmont's minority stockholders without
protection against a subsequent "freeze out"
merger or other transaction at an unfair
price. Ivanhoe disputes the bona fides of
that claimed perception. But, as discussed
elsewhere (See Part IV E, infra, of this
Opinion), the record, when viewed as a
whole, supports the conclusion that
Newmont's directors had reasonable cause for
concern. The Newmont directors' concerns
account for the "two front" strategy that
they employed in responding to the perceived
threats from both Ivanhoe and Gold Fields.
The record fairly establishes that very
early on, Newmont's management and Board had
made two basic decisions: [13 Del. J. Corp.
L. 695] (i) a decision not to "sell the
company" but to keep it independent (Parker
Aff., p 18), and (ii) a decision to oppose
and defeat any effort by Ivanhoe to take
control of Newmont. All steps taken by
Newmont from and after August 18, 1987 were
consistent with those objectives.
The record also fairly
establishes that Gold Fields' interests
diverged from Newmont's, and that Gold
Fields had its own separate agenda. Gold
Fields saw itself as having three options.
The first was for Gold Fields to sell its
stock interest to Ivanhoe at a profit. The
problem with that approach, however, was
that it was inconsistent with Gold Fields'
business objective of remaining primarily an
international gold company.
6
Moreover, any sale of Gold Fields' Newmont
shares would have highly adverse tax
consequences that would significantly reduce
the net proceeds received by Gold Fields.
Nonetheless, a sale of Gold Fields'
investment in Newmont, while not favored,
was viewed as a "fall back position." (1st
Hitchens Aff., p 24).
Gold Fields' second alternative
was to terminate the 1983 standstill
agreement and to buy sufficient Newmont
stock in the open market to obtain voting
control. Indeed, throughout this period Gold
Fields' investment banker, The First Boston
Corporation ("First Boston"), persistently
and strenuously urged that precise course.
The problem with that approach was that Gold
Fields' management was at that point
reluctant to invest a very large sum of
money to purchase additional Newmont shares.
Management's preferred strategy was to
preserve its position in Newmont without
making a large investment of its own
resources. Moreover, terminating the 1983
standstill agreement without at least
exploring "friendly" alternatives was viewed
as inconsistent with the relationship that
Gold Fields had tried so hard to cultivate
with Newmont since 1981. The standstill
agreement also contained favorable
provisions (e.g., a limitation on the
dilution of its position through issuance of
new shares) that Gold Fields valued quite
highly.
Those negative considerations
were not, however, thought of as
insurmountable obstacles. Gold Fields could
take control of Newmont by obtaining 49% of
Newmont's outstanding stock, and then by
soliciting consents to remove the Newmont
Board and replacing it [13 Del. J. Corp. L.
696] with Gold Fields' nominees. The new
Board would then declare and pay to all
stockholders a large cash dividend that
would, in effect, finance Gold Fields'
purchase of the additional Newmont stock.
(1st Hitchens Aff., p 28)
Gold Fields' third option was to
effect a "friendly", mutually advantageous
transaction with Newmont. It soon became
clear, however, that the quid pro quo for
any such arrangement would be Gold Fields'
having to agree to more stringent standstill
provisions than those already contained in
the 1983 standstill agreement. (1st Hitchens
Aff., p 25).
Between August 13 and September
17, 1987 Gold Fields' directors continually
assessed these alternatives. Although during
that period Gold Fields publicly supported
Newmont's management, privately Gold Fields
was actively considering all of its options.
One proposition, however, was
Page 594 always clear: at no time did Gold Fields
consider it acceptable to remain as a
minority stockholder in an
Ivanhoe-controlled Newmont. If, in any joust
to win the hand of Lady Newmont, Ivanhoe was
to emerge as the victorious knight, Gold
Fields had no intention of remaining as the
subservient squire.
C. Initial Reactive Measures
Shortly after August 18, Mr.
Parker (Newmont's Chairman) together with
Richard B. Leather (Newmont's General
Counsel) and a representative of Goldman,
Sachs & Co. ("Goldman Sachs") one of
Newmont's investment bankers, flew to London
apparently in an effort to persuade Gold
Fields to join cause with Newmont to defeat
Ivanhoe's anticipated takeover effort. At a
Gold Fields Board of Directors meeting held
on August 21, 1987, Mr. Parker advised that
Newmont intended to resist vigorously any
attempt by Ivanhoe to obtain control.
Several possible proposals were discussed,
all involving, in one form or other, Gold
Fields purchasing additional Newmont stock
either on the open market or by exchanging
certain Gold Fields assets for Newmont
shares. At that meeting Gold Fields made no
commitments. Mr. Agnew did express support
for Newmont's management, but at all times
Gold Fields was (to repeat) continuously
assessing its options and potential
strategies.
On a parallel front, Newmont's
management, anticipating that it might soon
become necessary to develop economic
alternatives to an Ivanhoe-proposed
transaction and that it might be important
to determine Newmont's value, accelerated
Newmont's already ongoing annual planning
process. On August 27, 1987 Newmont issued a
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 697] press release, and
sent a letter to its shareholders, in which
the company reported a 14% increase in gold
reserves, a 45% increase in production
forecasts by its 90-percent owned
subsidiary, Newmont Gold Company, and an
aggressive program to achieve those
increased production objectives. The gold
production forecast for 1987 was 585,000
ounces; for 1988 the forecast was for
850,000 ounces; and for 1989, the forecast
was for one million ounces.
On August 31, 1987, Mr. Pickens,
on behalf of Ivanhoe, sent Mr. Parker a
"bear hug" letter proposing that Ivanhoe
acquire all of the remaining Newmont common
stock in a negotiated transaction. By a
separate letter, Pickens also invited Gold
Fields' Mr. Agnew to discuss "a broad range
of alternatives to [Gold Fields'] sale of
interest in Newmont," including Gold Fields'
possibly retaining its minority interest in
Newmont or acquiring specific Newmont assets
in exchange for its Newmont stock. At that
point Ivanhoe had no in-place commitments
for the $6.25 billion of financing that a
$95 per share partial acquisition of Newmont
would have required.
Between September 1 and September
8, Newmont's Board met three times, and the
Gold Fields' Board met once, to explore
possible strategies and responses.
At the September 1, 1987 Newmont
Board meeting, Newmont's investment bankers
7 discussed the
available financial alternatives with the
Board. At that and later meetings the
Newmont Board considered (and ultimately
rejected) numerous alternative defensive
transactions. One alternative that was
discussed (and ultimately adopted) was the
payment of a large cash dividend which, it
was believed, would reduce Newmont's
liquidity, disrupt Ivanhoe's financing, and
(as an intended result) "maybe Pickens goes
away." Another alternative discussed (and
ultimately adopted) was to persuade Gold
Fields to
Page 595 increase its investment in Newmont to a
less-than-51% level. But as of September 1,
those matters were still for the future.
Gold Fields' position remained noncommittal.
Newmont's Board, however, [13 Del. J. Corp.
L. 698] instructed Newmont management to
explore with Gold Fields possible
transactions of potential mutual interest to
both companies.
On September 2, 1987 Gold Fields
held a special Board of Directors meeting in
London to discuss the Newmont situation,
Ivanhoe's $95 per share "bear hug" proposal,
and potential responses. A divergence of
views developed between the Gold Fields
executive ("inside") directors and the
nonexecutive ("outside") directors, over
whether Gold Fields should sell its
investment in Newmont or whether it should
take whatever steps were required to protect
that investment from "the unwelcome
attentions of Mr. Pickens," including
actions "not consonant with the wishes of
Newmont's officers and directors." (Agnew
Aff., p 6). Resolving those dissonant views
involved a process that required several
weeks. Meanwhile no final decisions were
made until at least September 17, 1987.
During that entire period Gold Fields
continued to manifest its apparent
willingness to discuss all reasonable
proposals with Newmont and Mr. Parker, while
at the same time continuing to reserve its
freedom to act independently and in its own
interests.
8
In furtherance of its effort to
generate financial alternatives to Ivanhoe's
by-then-anticipated hostile tender offer,
Newmont's management continued to develop an
aggressive business plan and capital
investment program. Management's program
(described by defendants as the "Gold Plan")
involved raising Newmont's 1988 gold
production estimates by 50% above 1987
levels.
9 The Gold
Plan was presented to and discussed by the
Newmont Board at its meeting [13 Del. J.
Corp. L. 699] held on September 7, 1987, but
was not formally approved until the Board
meeting of September 10, 1987. At the
September 7 meeting, the Newmont Board also
approved a revolving $2.25 billion credit
facility agreement between Newmont and a
syndicate of banks. That agreement provided
that the loans could be deemed in default if
an entity other than Gold Fields acquired
50% or more of Newmont.
D. The Ivanhoe Tender Offer and
Reactions Thereto
On September 8, 1987, Ivanhoe
commenced a partial cash tender offer for 28
million shares (42%) of Newmont stock at $95
per share, which was intended to bring
Ivanhoe's Newmont holdings up to 51%.
Although the Offer to Purchase disclosed
that Ivanhoe would seek to acquire all
Newmont shares not purchased in the offer in
a "second step" transaction at $95 per share
cash, there was no firm commitment to
conduct such a second step. Ivanhoe's Offer
to Purchase disclosed that the second step
transaction was subject to obtaining
sufficient financing and that no specific
proposal for a second step transaction
(other
Page 596 than the consideration to be offered) had
yet been determined.
10
On September 10, 1987, the
Newmont Board met to consider the Ivanhoe
offer. At the meeting, Goldman Sachs
summarized its financial analysis of the
Ivanhoe offer and discussed certain
valuations of Newmont. Based in part on that
analysis, the Board concluded that the $95
per share partial offer was inadequate, and
voted to recommend that Newmont's
stockholders reject it.
11
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 700] From
September 8 (when the Ivanhoe offer
commenced) through September 20 (when the
transactions under challenge were formally
agreed to) neither Mr. Agnew nor Mr.
Plumbridge attended any Newmont Board
meeting other than the final portion of the
September 20, 1987 meeting, after the
Newmont/Gold Fields standstill agreement had
been entered into. As a result, neither of
Gold Fields' representatives on the Newmont
Board became privy to any information
disclosed at those meetings, including
presentations made by Newmont's investment
bankers.
By about September 11, Gold
Fields' management began considering more
seriously the possibility of terminating the
1983 standstill agreement and making a
sizeable additional investment in Newmont.
To prepare for that contingency, Messrs.
Agnew and Plumbridge signed undated
resignations from the Newmont Board, as well
as a formal notice of termination of the
1983 standstill agreement. Those documents
were kept in New York for immediate delivery
to Newmont in the event that Gold Fields
chose to adopt that course of action.
On Sunday evening, September 13,
1987, Gold Fields management met. By that
point Mr. Agnew had concluded that the
exploratory talks aimed at working out a
mutually satisfactory arrangement with
Newmont had produced no concrete results.
Agnew proposed (and the executive directors
agreed) that plans should be developed to
commit Gold Fields' own funds to the
purchase of Newmont stock. At a Gold Fields
Board meeting held the next day, the Board
directed Mr. Agnew "to stiffen our resolve
to stay in Newmont and see Mr. Pickens out."
(Agnew Aff., p 13). Accordingly, Mr. Agnew
began exploring ways of raising the
necessary funds to purchase shares
sufficient to increase Gold Fields' stake in
Newmont to between 40% and 49%. Over the
next few days Gold Fields' management
consulted with Mr. Joseph Perella of First
Boston to discuss how the necessary funds
might be raised.
Throughout this period Gold
Fields representatives continued negotiating
and exploring (with their opposite numbers
at Newmont) possible joint transactions on
mutually satisfactory terms. By September
16, after Gold Fields' advisors informed Mr.
Agnew that [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 701] their
latest negotiation with Newmont over "a
possible friendly deal coupled with a
standstill," had broken down, Mr. Agnew
advised his confederates that "it was time
to find other partners,
Page 597 stand up for our rights, and go hostile."
(Agnew Aff., p 16). By September 17, 1987,
Mr. Perella had indicated that First Boston
would advance the necessary financing for
large share open market purchases. (Ibid., p
17).
On September 16, 1987, Ivanhoe
amended its tender offer, increasing the
offering price to $105 per share. Two days
later, on September 18, 1987, the Newmont
Board met to consider Goldman Sachs' revised
financial analysis of the amended Ivanhoe
offer, as well as potential responses. Based
on the revised analysis, both Goldman Sachs
and Kidder Peabody concluded that Ivanhoe's
amended $105 per share partial offer was
still inadequate.
12
E. Development of the
Transactions Presently Under Challenge
Also discussed at the September
18 Newmont Board meeting were various
potential alternative responses to the
Ivanhoe offer. The principal focus of that
meeting, however, was a "restructuring"
proposal that Newmont's management had
developed and recommended[13 Del. J. Corp.
L. 702] and had apparently communicated to
Gold Fields the day before.
The proposed restructuring
program involved Newmont declaring a
nondiscriminatory $33 per share dividend and
selling its nongold assets to finance the
dividend, thereby leaving Newmont with its
core gold business. Management believed that
in the near term, the dividend would provide
shareholders with greater value than the
face value of the Ivanhoe offer, while in
the long term it would permit stockholders
to participate in the company's future
growth. The dividend would also put money
into Gold Fields' hands that could be used
to make open market purchases at an overall
relatively low cost. But the proposal was
clearly a two-edged sword: Gold Fields
ownership of 49.9%, while vanquishing
Ivanhoe, would also position Gold Fields to
wrest control of Newmont with potential
jeopardy to the public stockholders'
investment. Accordingly, the Board resolved
that before any dividend was declared, a new
standstill agreement had to be negotiated
with Gold Fields.
Over the ensuing weekend,
intensive efforts were made to negotiate a
standstill agreement with Gold Fields.
(Negotiations between those parties for a
standstill agreement had been sporadic--and
unsuccessful--since August 16). Newmont's
proposal to pay a $33 per share dividend
broke the impasse, since the dividend would
enable Gold Fields to buy up to 49.9% of
Newmont for a relatively low average cost.
The negotiations conducted were at arm's
length, with each side insisting that the
standstill agreement and the dividend
13 be the quid pro quo
for the
Page 598 other. An agreement was apparently finalized
on Sunday, September 20, 1987, shortly
before the Newmont Board meeting scheduled
for that same afternoon.
At the September 20 Newmont Board
meeting (from most of which Messrs. Agnew
and Plumbridge had absented themselves), two
critical decisions were made. The first was
to recommend that Newmont shareholders
reject the $105 Ivanhoe amended offer on the
basis that it was inadequate for reasons of
price and for the other reasons previously
described. (See notes 11 and 12, supra ).
That [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 703] decision was
made in reliance upon the presentations and
opinions of Goldman Sachs and Kidder
Peabody.
Second, the Board voted to
approve the new standstill agreement
(referred to herein as "the September 20
standstill agreement"). After the vote, the
new September 20 agreement was executed by
both companies, and at Gold Fields'
insistence, it was delivered to Newmont in
escrow, conditioned upon Newmont's declaring
the $33 per share dividend. Messrs. Agnew
and Plumbridge then joined the meeting but
abstained from voting on the otherwise
unanimously approved dividend and other
"restructuring" transactions.
14
Shortly thereafter, Gold Fields
and Newmont made the requisite filings with
the S.E.C. disclosing the above-described
corporate actions. In its amended Schedule
13D, Gold Fields disclosed that it intended
to increase its ownership in Newmont from
26.2% to 49.9% through open market purchases
and negotiated transactions. In response to
those disclosures, Ivanhoe adjusted its $105
offering price to $78 to account for the $33
dividend, with the result that the dividend
($33), added to the adjusted offering price
($78) would equal $105.
On September 21 and 22, 1987 Gold
Fields authorized its investment banker,
First Boston, to buy 23.7% of Newmont's
outstanding shares on the open market or
through negotiated purchases. First Boston
bought 15,799,000 shares at an average price
of approximately $98 per share, for a total
investment of approximately $1.6 billion.
(Those purchases are the "street sweep"
under challenge in this litigation.) As a
result, Gold Fields now owns 49.7% of
Newmont's outstanding shares which, when
combined with .5% owned by Newmont's
management, constitutes majority control.
Of critical importance is the
fact that Gold Fields' entire 49.7% block of
Newmont was made subject to the September 20
standstill agreement which, like the 1983
standstill, imposed acquisition, voting and
transfer restrictions upon Gold Fields'
Newmont stock. Specifically, the September
20 standstill agreement prohibited Gold
Fields from acquiring Newmont stock in an
amount that would bring Gold Fields' total
ownership above 49.9% of Newmont's
outstanding shares. [13 Del. J. Corp. L.
704] Gold Fields remained free to vote its
Newmont shares as it chose on matters other
than the election of directors. However, it
was required to vote all of its shares for
the director slate proposed by Newmont's
Board of Directors. Moreover, Gold Fields
was prohibited from soliciting proxies in
opposition to the Newmont Board's slate.
Gold Fields was, however, entitled to
designate the same percentage of directors
to be elected as the percentage of Newmont
voting stock that it held, up to a ceiling
of 40% of the positions to be filled.
The September 20 standstill
agreement also restricted Gold Fields'
ability to transfer its Newmont shares to a
third party
Page 599 free of those restrictions. During the first
five years (until November 1, 1992) Gold
Fields could not transfer Newmont shares
that would result in the transferee having
9.9% of the voting power of Newmont, unless
the transferee agreed to be bound by the
standstill agreement. During the second five
years (between November 1, 1992 and October
31, 1997) Gold Fields could not transfer
Newmont shares that would amount to the
greater of 9.9% of Newmont's outstanding
voting stock or more than 50% of Gold
Fields' then-holdings of Newmont stock,
again unless the transferee agreed to be
covered by the standstill agreement.
As previously discussed, the
Court's concern as to the possible impact of
the foregoing restrictions upon Gold Fields'
49.7% block of Newmont stock, led to the
entry of temporary restraining orders
prohibiting Gold Fields from making further
purchases of Newmont stock and requiring
Gold Fields to hold separate the Newmont
shares purchased by it in the street sweep.
On September 25, 1987, apparently
in response to the Court's expressed
concerns, Newmont and Gold Fields
unilaterally amended the September 20
standstill agreement. Defendants contend
that the amendments have eliminated all
features of the September 20 agreement that
create any arguable potential for
entrenchment. That newly-amended standstill
agreement (herein referred to as the
"September 25 standstill agreement"), and
its effects, are addressed elsewhere in this
Opinion.
III. THE PLAINTIFFS' REQUESTED RELIEF AND
LEGAL CONTENTIONS
Before outlining the plaintiffs'
contentions, the Court will first describe
the preliminary injunctive relief being
requested. Essentially the plaintiffs seek
by way of preliminary injunctive relief to
prevent or undo (i) the $33 per share
dividend and (ii) Gold Fields' purchase [13
Del. J. Corp. L. 705] of 23% of Newmont's
stock in the street sweep.
The class plaintiffs (but not
Ivanhoe) seek to enjoin Newmont from paying
the dividend on the ground that the
dividend, although not itself unlawful, was
an integral part of the defendants' scheme
and purpose to entrench themselves in office
and, hence, should be invalidated.
In addition, all plaintiffs seek,
basically, a preliminary mandatory
rescission of the Gold Fields "street sweep"
stock purchases. Ivanhoe proposes two
alternative methods for rescission. The
first method allows those stockholders who
sold their Newmont stock to Gold Fields in
the street sweep ("the selling
stockholders") to buy back their Newmont
stock by repaying Gold Fields its purchase
price less any seller commissions and less
the $33 dividend, if it has previously been
paid. The selling sellers may then, at their
option, either retain their shares, tender
them into the Ivanhoe offer (or any other
then-pending offer), or resell them in the
open market. Under Ivanhoe's second
rescission proposal, each selling
stockholder would be allowed to instruct
Gold Fields to tender the number of Newmont
shares purchased from him into the Ivanhoe
offer (or any other then-pending offer),
after which Gold Fields would pay each
selling shareholder the difference between
the tender offer price and the purchase
price paid by Gold Fields. All shares not
thus tendered would belong to Gold Fields.
15
In support of their requests for
relief, the plaintiffs advance several
contentions, all of which are based upon the
plaintiffs' interpretation of the record.
Plaintiffs factual slant is that the
dividend, the street sweep, and the
September 20 standstill agreement were
integral parts of a single preconceived
scheme by Newmont's Board and Gold Fields to
defeat the Ivanhoe offer and any other
potential hostile takeovers of Newmont, by
"locking up" control of Newmont for ten
years. The alleged "lock up"
Page 600 scheme included (i) Newmont declaring a
dividend solely to finance Gold Fields' open
market purchases of Newmont stock to bring
Gold Fields' ownership up to 49.9%, and (ii)
Gold Fields' subjecting its entire 49.9%
block (which all parties agree is de facto
control) to the restrictions of the
September 20 standstill agreement. It is
argued that the intended result of that [13
Del. J. Corp. L. 706] scheme was to
guarantee the continued incumbency of the
Newmont Board or its nominees and to "lock
up" voting control and thereby to prevent
any future unsolicited efforts to acquire
over 50% of Newmont's stock.
Plaintiffs contend that the above
actions violated four separate fiduciary
duties owed by Newmont's directors and for
which Gold Fields is equally culpable either
as a fiduciary or, alternatively, as an
aider and abettor. First, the defendants are
charged with using corporate assets and
processes for the purpose of maintaining
themselves in control, in violation of their
duty of loyalty to Newmont's public
stockholders. Second, the defendants are
accused of breaching the fiduciary duties
imposed upon them by Revlon, Inc. v.
MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173 (1986) ("Revlon "), (i) by
effecting a "lock up" scheme that prevented
a bidding auction which, in turn, would have
resulted in Newmont shareholders receiving
the highest available price for their
shares, and (ii) by discriminating among
contenders for control in refusing to
negotiate with Ivanhoe and to provide
Ivanhoe with the same value-related
information that was provided to Gold
Fields. Third, the defendants are claimed to
have breached the fiduciary duties owed to
the selling stockholders in the street
sweep, in which (it is argued) Gold Fields
(i) coerced the selling shareholders and
(ii) used undisclosed material inside
information. Fourth, the defendants are
charged with having adopted defensive
measures not responsive to any reasonably
perceived threat to corporate policy and
which, in all events, were unreasonable in
relation to whatever threat may have
existed, thus violating the fiduciary duties
imposed by Unocal Corporation v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946
(1985) ("Unocal ").
IV. THE PROBABLE MERITS OF PLAINTIFFS'
CLAIMS
To obtain the extraordinary
remedy of a preliminary injunction, the
plaintiffs must demonstrate a reasonable
probability that they will succeed on the
merits of their claims, that they will
suffer imminent irreparable harm if
preliminary injunctive relief is denied, and
that the harm to the plaintiffs if relief is
denied outweighs the harm to the defendants
if relief is granted.
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings, 506 A.2d at 179 (1986); Gimbel
v. Signal Companies, Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 599,
602-03, aff'd, Del.Supr.,
316 A.2d 619
(1974); Sealy Mattress Co. of New Jersey,
Inc., v. Sealy, Inc., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
8853, Jacobs, V.C. (July 20, 1987) at 20.
In this case the defendants
concede the plaintiffs' claim of irreparable
harm, but contend that the plaintiffs have
failed to show [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 707]
that they will probably succeed on the
merits of their claims. The defendants also
argue that the plaintiffs' claims, even if
preliminarily established, do not justify
the kind of temporary injunctive relief that
is requested here. For the reasons now
discussed, I conclude that, with one
exception, the plaintiffs have failed to
demonstrate probable success on the merits
of their claims of fiduciary wrongdoing. As
for the claim on which plaintiffs have shown
a probability of success, the requested
injunctive relief must be denied, because
such relief would be excessive in relation
to--and not needed to prevent--the
threatened irreparable harm.
A. Plaintiffs' "Entrenchment
Motive" Arguments
16
The plaintiffs attack the
challenged transactions on two distinct
levels: the level
Page 601 of the defendants' underlying subjective
intent in effecting the transactions, and
the level of the objective effect of the
transactions themselves. The intent/effect
distinction may be important, in that the
analysis may differ depending upon which
doctrine is employed. Under the "subjective
intent" approach, the challenged
transactions, even if otherwise lawful, may
be invalidated if they are found to have
been employed for an inequitable purpose,
such as perpetuating the directors in
control. See, e.g., Schnell v. Chris Craft
Industries, Inc., Del.Supr., 285 A.2d 437,
439 (1971); Bennett v. Propp, Del.Supr., 187
A.2d 405, 409 (1962). A court using that
approach would focus primarily upon the
subjective motivation of the decision
makers, rather than upon the legality or
effect of the transactions themselves. Under
the "objective effect" approach, however,
the decision makers' subjective intent
becomes largely irrelevant, the pivotal
inquiry being instead upon whether the
specific transactions are themselves
unlawful or, if lawful, whether their effect
is inequitable. See, e.g.,
Unocal Corporation v. Mesa Petroleum Co.,
493 A.2d at 955-957; AC Acquisitions
Corp v. Anderson, Clayton & Co., Del.Ch., 519 A.2d 103, 114-115 (1986); Lerman v.
Diagnostic Data, Inc., Del.Ch., 421 A.2d
906, 914 (1980).
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 708]
Assuming that a "subjective intent" analysis
is legally appropriate in this particular
context,
17 the
plaintiffs' inequitable purpose arguments
must be rejected, because their factual
predicate--that the challenged transactions
represent a unified entrenchment scheme
motivated by a single, dominant entrenchment
purpose--is not adequately supported by the
record.
The factual premise of
plaintiffs' argument is that once Ivanhoe
surfaced, Newmont's Board and Gold Fields
immediately joined forces to enable Gold
Fields to acquire sufficient stock to obtain
voting control, and Gold Fields then
delivered that control to Newmont's Board,
all for the specific, deliberate purpose of
entrenching the Board and preventing future
takeover attempts. In fact, (see Part II,
supra ), and as explained more fully below,
that is not how the scenario unfolded. The
motivations of the players were far more
subtle and complex. Newmont's Board, was to
be sure, endeavoring to prevent hostile
takeovers by Ivanhoe or Gold Fields on terms
that might jeopardize the public
stockholders' investment. Nor was Gold
Fields a willing cat's-paw for the Newmont
Board, standing by on a moment's notice to
do the Board's bidding and "buy up voting
control" upon being paid a dividend of $1
billion of Newmont funds. Defendants'
description of Gold Fields as a "tiger let
out of a cage" is the more apt metaphor.
Like Ivanhoe, Gold Fields was a potential
bidder for control with objectives
potentially adverse to those of Newmont's
Board. Only after weeks of separate and
mutual exploration of options and
arm's-length negotiations did the two
companies manage to arrive at an accord. As
later discussed, the great part of what the
defendants agreed to and did appears
(preliminarily) to have been proper. Some
aspects of the standstill agreement, because
of their entrenchment effect, were not.
Putting that agreement to one side, the
Court cannot conclude on this record that
the defendants were motivated by an
overriding subjective intent to entrench
themselves.
18
Rather,
Page 602 Gold Fields and the Newmont Board were each
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 709] motivated to--and
did--act for their own independent,
business-related reasons.
B. The Validity of the Dividend
The class plaintiffs seek
preliminarily to enjoin the dividend on the
ground that it was enacted in furtherance of
the defendants' scheme to entrench the
Newmont Board, and on the additional ground
that the dividend constitutes waste.
When briefing and oral argument
were scheduled, all parties agreed that the
only transaction in issue on the preliminary
injunction motion was the street sweep.
Although the class plaintiffs had filed an
amended complaint which included a claim for
relief against the dividend, those
plaintiffs' opening brief was addressed
solely to the street sweep and did not
mention the dividend. Two days later, only
hours before the defendants' briefs were to
be filed and one day before the oral
argument, the class plaintiffs gave notice
for the first time that they intended to
challenge the dividend. Their supplemental
brief on that issue was filed the next day,
i.e., the day of the argument. The
defendants objected, insisting that they
could not (and should not be compelled to)
prepare a response in the short time
remaining. Without prejudice to that
objection, the Court permitted the class
plaintiffs to address the dividend issue at
oral argument.
The foregoing indicates that the
challenge to the dividend was an
afterthought. As a procedural matter, it
comes too late. But, as a substantive
matter, the argument fails as well.
The class plaintiffs concede that
the dividend does not violate either the
Delaware General Corporation Law or
Newmont's certificate of incorporation or
by-laws. That being the case, this Court can
interfere with the Board's decision to pay
the dividend only if (a) the dividend was
the product of self-dealing and the
directors fail to prove that the dividend is
entirely fair, or if (b) no self-dealing is
present and the plaintiff is able to prove
that the dividend "... cannot be grounded on
any reasonable business objective." Sinclair
Oil Corporation v. Levien, Del.Supr., 280
A.2d 717, [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 710] 721
(1971). Where the business judgment rule
applies (that is, where no self-dealing is
shown), the motives for declaring a dividend
are immaterial unless the plaintiff can show
that the dividend payments resulted from
improper motives and amounted to waste. Id.
As stated by the Delaware Supreme Court in
Gabelli & Co., Inc. Profit Sharing Plan v.
Liggett Group, Inc., Del.Supr., 479 A.2d
276, 280 (1984), "... before the courts will
interfere with the [business] judgment of
the board of directors in such matter, fraud
or gross abuse of discretion must be shown."
See also,
Burton v. Exxon Corporation, 583 F.Supp.
405, 415 (S.D.N.Y.1984) (applying
Delaware law).
In determining the propriety of
the $33 dividend, the business judgment rule
is applicable because no self-dealing is
shown. The dividend is to be paid to all
Newmont shareholders in proportion to their
stock interest, and the defendants will
receive no greater proportionate share than
would the minority stockholders.
Sinclair Oil Corporation v. Levien, 280 A.2d
at 721-722. The record discloses no
fraud or gross abuse of discretion by
Newmont directors, nor has it been shown
that the dividend cannot be grounded on any
reasonable business objective. To the
contrary, the dividend would appear to
further several legitimate business
objectives of the Newmont Board: (i) it
permits shareholders to realize immediately
a portion of the corporation's value, (ii)
it defeats an unsolicited partial tender
offer reasonably regarded by the Board as
coercive and not in the shareholders' best
interests, and (iii) it induced Gold Fields
to restrict voluntarily its stock ownership
to 49.9% of Newmont's outstanding shares and
its right to exercise its
Page 603 voting power to take control of Newmont,
possibly to the detriment of public
stockholders.
Nor is there merit to the claim
that the dividend amounts to waste. The
class plaintiffs argue that the dividend
will leave Newmont with a net deficit in
shareholders' equity. But where, as here, a
dividend complies with 8 Del.C. § 170, the
alleged excessiveness of the amount alone
does not state a cause of action.
Sinclair Oil Corporation v. Levien, 280 A.2d
at 721. Moreover, the argument ignores
the fact that Newmont's nongold assets will
be sold in the restructuring and the
proceeds will be used to eliminate any
temporary deficit.
I now turn to the plaintiffs'
remaining arguments, which concern the
validity of the street sweep.
C. The Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Claim Under Revlon
Plaintiffs first attack the
street sweep as an illegal "lock up"
arrangement that violated the Newmont
directors' fiduciary duty [13 Del. J. Corp.
L. 711] to obtain the highest available
price for shareholders in any sale of the
company. Revlon, 506 A.2d at 184.
Plaintiffs' argument is that the street
sweep, by defeating Ivanhoe's offer and
precluding any other offer before any
serious competitive bidding for Newmont
could begin, foreclosed the auction for
control of Newmont required by Revlon.
Plaintiffs further argue that the Newmont
Board's refusal to negotiate with Ivanhoe
and its refusal to furnish Ivanhoe with the
same information that Newmont supplied to
Gold Fields, constituted "playing favorites
with the contending factions" that, in these
circumstances, was impermissible. Ibid.
In Revlon the Delaware Supreme
Court held that where a corporation that is
the target of competing takeover bids is to
be sold, its directors' duty becomes one of
"maximization of the company's value at a
sale for the stockholders' benefit ..." to
obtain "the best price for the stockholders
at a sale of the company ..." Revlon, 506
A.2d at 182. That Court also held that "lock
up" arrangements that "draw bidders into the
battle" in furtherance of those objectives
are permissible, while those "which end an
active auction and foreclose further bidding
operate to the shareholders' detriment" and
are invalid. 506 A.2d at 183. Moreover, in
circumstances where bidders make relatively
similar offers or the sale of the company is
inevitable, "... favoritism for a white
knight to the total exclusion of a hostile
bidder" is not permissible. 506 A.2d at 184.
The plaintiffs' Revlon argument
is flawed, because it rests upon the infirm
premise that the fiduciary obligations
imposed by Revlon were triggered in the
present case. But Revlon duties arise only
where circumstances make it inevitable that
the company will be sold to one of the
bidders competing to acquire it. That is not
the situation here. At no time did Newmont's
directors resolve to sell the company. On
the contrary, their steadfast objective was
to keep it independent. In this case Gold
Fields was not a bidder competing with
Ivanhoe to acquire (and thereafter to
control) Newmont. Gold Fields was a large
investor whose primary desire was to protect
its investment in Newmont, not to acquire
and operate that company. Gold Fields
purchased only enough additional Newmont
stock to enable it to fend off the threat
that the Ivanhoe offer posed to its
investment. (Thus Gold Fields' willingness
to enter into a standstill agreement which
limited its ability to seize control of the
company.)
D. The "Street Sweep" Coercion
and Inside Information Claims
Plaintiffs next attack the street
sweep as an independent fiduciary duty
violation. They contend that (1) the street
sweep was conducted [13 Del. J. Corp. L.
712] on the basis of material inside
information used by Gold Fields but not
disclosed to the public or to the selling
shareholders and that (2) the selling
shareholders were wrongfully coerced by the
defendants' acts into selling their shares
to Gold Fields. Those contentions are now
addressed.
1. The Claim that Gold Fields
Used Nonpublic Inside Information
Plaintiffs contend that Gold
Fields, through its two representatives on
the
Page 604 Newmont Board, received confidential
information on Newmont that was not
disclosed to the shareholders or the public.
Plaintiffs argue that (i) Newmont's
directors had a duty to refrain from using
confidential information obtained by virtue
of their director status, (ii) that that
duty extended to Gold Fields by virtue of
its "insider" status and that (iii) the
information divulged to Gold Fields, was
also required to be disclosed to Newmont's
shareholders. See Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 457 A.2d 701, 711 (1983); Brophy
v. Cities Service Co., Del.Ch., 70 A.2d 5,
7-8 (1949).
The defendants do not dispute the
principles proscribing the use by
fiduciaries and insiders of material
undisclosed inside information. They dispute
only the application of those strictures to
the facts of this case. Specifically, the
defendants argue that when the street sweep
was conducted on September 21 and 22, 1987,
whatever material information Gold Fields
possessed had already been disclosed to the
public. A review of the record persuades the
Court that the defendants' position is
correct.
The record indicates that from
August 18, (once Ivanhoe crossed the 9.9%
stock acquisition threshold) up to September
21, (when the street sweep purchases began)
Gold Fields received no nonpublic inside
information concerning Newmont. During this
period Gold Fields' representatives on the
Newmont Board did not attend Newmont Board
meetings, other than the final portion of
the September 20 meeting at which no inside
information was disclosed. Specifically,
Gold Fields received no valuation
information from Newmont's investment
bankers during that period.
What inside information Gold
Fields did have consisted of budget
forecasts for the forthcoming year and for
the next five years (2nd Hitchens Aff.,
Exhibits C, D and E). Those production
estimates and financial projections had been
furnished to Gold Fields during the spring
of 1987 and were not publicly disclosed at
that time. The question is whether by the
time of the September, 1987 street sweep,
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 713] any of that
information was material and, therefore,
should have been disclosed.
By the time of the street sweep,
the key assumptions supporting the
(pre-August 18) budget forecasts supplied to
Gold Fields had significantly changed. Those
assumptions--which related to governing
Newmont's gold production--were superseded
by the revised, more aggressive production
assumptions that formed the basis for the
Gold Plan. All of those revised assumptions,
as well as the Gold Plan itself, were
publicly disclosed in the press releases and
letter to shareholders dated August 27 and
September 1, 1987, and in Newmont's Schedule
14D-9 filed with the S.E.C.
Those being the circumstances,
plaintiffs have failed to meet their burden
of proving that the undisclosed outdated
production and financial forecasts, now
obsolete in light of the recent publicly
disclosed new Gold Plan forecasts, would
have "assumed actual significance in the
deliberations of the reasonable
shareholder."
TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426
U.S. 438, 449, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976); Rosenblatt v. Getty
Oil Company, Del.Supr., 493 A.2d 929, 944-45
(1985); see also, Weinberger v. Rio Grande
Industries, Inc., Del.Ch., 519 A.2d 116,
126-131 (1986). These forecasts, therefore,
have not been shown to be material and, as a
consequence, a subject of mandated
disclosure. Accordingly, the plaintiffs
inside information argument must be
rejected.
2. The Claim of Unlawful Coercion
The plaintiffs also contend that
this Court should enjoin the street sweep,
because it was conducted so as unlawfully to
coerce the selling shareholders to sell
their shares to Gold Fields. Relying upon
the affidavits of several institutions that
sold sizeable blocks of Newmont stock to
Gold Fields, plaintiffs assert that:
The probable success of Gold Fields'
Street Sweep, coupled with the amended
Standstill Agreement between Newmont and
Gold Fields disclosed on September 21,
convinced the market that Ivanhoe's tender
offer and acquisition attempt
Page 605 would be defeated, thereby ultimately
driving down the price of Newmont stock.
(Sellers Affidavits). The result was a
frantic rush to sell Newmont shares to First
Boston. That these sales were the result of
coercion is clear: many of these holders
would not have sold their shares of Newmont
but for the fear that the amended Standstill
Agreement and [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 714] the
resulting Street Sweep would defeat the
Ivanhoe offer. (Ivanhoe Opening Brief, p.
37)
The plaintiffs contend that by
facilitating the coercive stock purchases,
Newmont's directors breached their fiduciary
duties to the selling stockholders, and that
Gold Fields (either as an aider and abettor
or as a fiduciary in its own right) did
likewise.
To establish a claim for
actionable coercion, plaintiffs must show
that the selling shareholders were
wrongfully induced by some act of the
defendants to sell their shares for reasons
unrelated to the economic merits of the
sale. See McFadden Holdings, Inc. v. John
Blair & Co., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8489, Jacobs,
V.C. (July 2, 1986), at 14-15. Transactions
found to be actionably coercive have
included a tender offer structured so as to
afford shareholders no practical choice but
to tender for an unfair price (see Kahn v.
United States Sugar Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
7313, Hartnett, V.C. (December 10, 1985) at
10, 15) [Available on WESTLAW, DE-CS
database], and an offer by a corporation for
a fair price, but structured and timed so as
to effectively deprive stockholders of the
ability to choose a competing offer--also at
a fair price--that the shareholders might
have found preferable. (AC Acquisitions
Corp. v. Anderson, Clayton & Co., Del.Ch.,
519 A.2d 103, 113-114, (1986)). An offer
that is "economically 'too good to resist'
would not, for that reason alone, be
actionably coercive." Lieb v. Clark,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 9012, Jacobs, V.C. (June
1, 1987), at 12.
At the time of the street sweep,
the following circumstances were matters of
public knowledge: the unaffected
(pre-Ivanhoe) market price level of Newmont
stock had been in the mid to high 40s. (In
June, 1987, the stock price was about $45
per share). Both the Gold Fields purchase
price (the September 21-22 market price of
approximately $98 per share) and the Ivanhoe
offering price ($105 per share) included a
large premium above previous price levels.
Gold Fields owned 26% of Newmont's stock and
needed only 23% more to reach 49.9%
ownership. Ivanhoe's offering price was
higher than the market prices to be paid by
Gold Fields, during the street sweep, but
the Ivanhoe offer and Gold Fields purchases
differed in one very significant respect: a
stockholder who tendered to Gold Fields
would be able to sell 100% of his holdings
immediately for $98. A stockholder who sold
to Ivanhoe for $105 could sell only 42% of
his shares, with the purchase price to be
paid at some later time, and only if the
offer succeeded, and with no firm commitment
by Ivanhoe to purchase his remaining shares.
Finally, the market was informed that
Newmont and Gold Fields had entered into the
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 715] September 20
standstill agreement and that the $33 per
share dividend had been declared.
Clearly significant forces of
some kind were at work here. In less than
two trading days, almost 16 million Newmont
shares changed hands. But those sales were
driven, at least arguably, by market forces.
It seems clear that given a choice between
the Ivanhoe and Gold Fields offers, some
shareholders would prefer to sell 100% of
their shares for an immediate $98 per share,
rather than sell 42% of their shares for
$105 to be received, perhaps, at a later
time. That is, the present record indicates
that the "frantic rush" to sell to Gold
Fields can be explained in terms of the
economic merits of the Gold Fields
purchases.
The plaintiffs, however, assert
that the selling shareholders sold their
stock not in response to economic or market
forces but because they were "coerced." To
establish that the selling stockholders were
actionably coerced, the plaintiffs must
prove that the sellers' decision to sell to
Gold Fields
Page 606 was influenced in some material way by a
wrongful or inequitable act of the
defendants. The plaintiffs make no reasoned
effort to meet that burden. At the time of
the street sweep the marketplace was aware
of only three acts committed by the
defendants: (i) the dividend, (ii) Gold
Fields' announced intent to make open market
purchases of an additional 23% block, and
(iii) the September 20 standstill agreement.
The dividend was a lawful act. Gold Fields'
purchases of additional Newmont stock on the
open market were, standing alone, legally
proper. The fact that Gold Fields had an
advantage over Ivanhoe in terms of ownership
(it already owned 26%) and timing (it could
purchase the additional 23% immediately,
without having to await the conclusion of
the federally prescribed tender offer
period) were advantages unrelated to and
independent of the Ivanhoe offer. Those
advantages were not gained by any illegal
act or contrivance of the defendants. Those
advantages may have created pressure to sell
to Gold Fields because of the (accurate)
perception that Gold Fields would probably
succeed in acquiring 49.9% of Newmont and
thereby defeat the Ivanhoe offer. But any
such pressure was the result of market
forces. No showing has been made that such
pressure resulted from any culpable act by
the defendants.
Finally, the plaintiffs suggest
that the September 20 standstill agreement
had an improper coercive effect. The
suggestion is also without record support.
Although some of the affidavits submitted by
certain institutional sellers contain claims
of coercion and allude to the standstill
agreement, those references are vague and
conclusory. [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 716] The
affidavits fail to establish any logical
connection between the standstill agreement
and the affiants' decision to sell to Gold
Fields. Whether the proper expression of the
standard for such a nexus be in terms of
"causation" or "materiality", under either
standard the evidence falls short. That is,
the affidavits fail to show either that "but
for" the existence of the standstill
agreement the selling stockholders would
have tendered to Ivanhoe, or that the terms
of the standstill agreement would have been
significant to the sellers' decision to sell
their stock to Gold Fields (as opposed to
tendering it to Ivanhoe). Accordingly, the
claim of unlawful coercion must be rejected.
E. The Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Claim under Unocal
Finally, the plaintiffs argue
that the defendants breached the fiduciary
duties set forth in Unocal, in resisting the
Ivanhoe offer, first by enabling Gold Fields
to acquire 49.9% voting control, and second,
by "locking up" that control by means of the
September 20 standstill agreement.
1.
The standard generally used to
evaluate business decisions made by a board
of directors is the business judgment rule.
However, when a board resists an attempted
takeover, there arises "the omnipresent
specter that a board may be acting primarily
in its own interests rather than those of
the corporation and its shareholders ..."
Unocal, 493 A.2d at 954; Revlon, 506 A.2d at
180. Thus, Unocal imposes upon directors
resisting a takeover bid a dual burden of
proof, which they must first satisfy in
order to claim the protection of the
business judgment rule. First, the directors
must prove that they had reasonable grounds
for believing there was a danger to
corporate policy and effectiveness. That
burden is satisfied by a showing of good
faith and reasonable investigation. Second,
the directors must demonstrate that any
measures they adopted in response to the
danger were reasonable in relation to the
threat posed. Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955;
Revlon, 506 A.2d at 180. Such a showing
requires the directors to analyze the nature
of the takeover bid and its effect, as well
as the effect of the defensive measure, on
the corporate enterprise. Unocal, 493 A.2d
at 955;
AC Acquisitions v. Anderson, Clayton & Co.,
519 A.2d at 114.
If the directors are unable to
meet the burden of proof required by Unocal,
the Board's actions will not be protected
under the business [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 717]
judgment rule. As a
Page 607 consequence, the directors will have the
burden to prove that all aspects of the
defensive measure or transaction are
entirely and intrinsically fair. In this
context the entire fairness test is
objective, that is, the fairness of the
Board's response to the takeover threat is
measured by its objective effect, not by the
directors' subjective intent or good faith
in adopting the response.
AC Acquisitions v. Anderson, Clayton & Co.,
519 A.2d at 115.
Application of these principles
to the instant facts raises two bedrock
questions: (1) Did Newmont's directors
reasonably perceive Ivanhoe and Gold Fields
as threats to corporate policy and
effectiveness? (2) If so, were the defensive
measures adopted reasonable in relation to
the threat posed? Those questions are now
considered in turn.
2.
The plaintiffs contend that
Newmont should not have considered either
Ivanhoe or Gold Fields to be a threat. They
argue that Ivanhoe's all cash offer, coupled
with its stated intention to provide a
"second step" at the same price, was no
threat because stockholders could simply
choose to accept or reject the $105 and the
premium it represented. Plaintiffs further
insist that Gold Fields did not constitute a
threat, because it did not, in fact, intend
to terminate the standstill agreement or to
seek to obtain control. Indeed, plaintiffs
say, Gold Fields did not have the financial
wherewithal to do so, and would have
encountered legal obstacles, (including
obtaining approvals from the United States
Department of Justice, the London Stock
Exchange, and its own shareholders) if they
attempted to seize control of Newmont.
Plaintiffs assertions are not
adequately supported by the record, which
shows that both Ivanhoe and Gold Fields
posed a threat--reasonably perceived by the
directors as such--to Newmont. Those
perceptions were the product of a
deliberative process, carried out in good
faith and by reasonable investigation on the
part of the Board. Since the Gold Fields'
director-designees did not participate in
those deliberations, a majority of Newmont's
Board during this critical period were
outside, independent directors. The process
used to evaluate Newmont's options and the
adequacy of the Ivanhoe offer included a
series of meetings and discussions among the
directors themselves, and also with
independent financial and legal advisors.
The directors' conclusion that the Ivanhoe
offer was inadequate in terms of price, and
that there were superior alternatives for
shareholders to realize [13 Del. J. Corp. L.
718] the underlying values in Newmont, were
supported by the financial analysis and
opinions of those advisors. And their
conclusion that the Ivanhoe offer--a
two-tier offer having no assured "back end"
merger at the same ($105) price--was
inadequate, was supported by the Unocal
decision, which recognized the inherently
coercive nature of a two-tier offer that one
of the same offerors (Mesa Petroleum) had
made two years before. Unocal, 493 A.2d at
956.
Nor does the record support
plaintiffs' characterization of Gold Fields
as a "paper tiger" that posed no threat.
Newmont had already experienced one battle
with Gold Fields several years before.
Newmont's Board had good reason to believe
that Gold Fields would not stand idly by and
allow its $1 billion investment to be
jeopardized by Ivanhoe. The Board knew that
at any time after August 18, Gold Fields
could terminate the 1983 standstill
agreement and then seek to acquire control.
In fact, Gold Fields came quite close to
doing just that. It had arranged for the
necessary financing with First Boston, its
Newmont Board-designees had signed (undated)
resignations from the Newmont Board, and
Gold Fields had prepared a notice of
termination of the standstill agreement.
These documents were available for delivery
to Newmont on short notice. That Gold Fields
did not ultimately carry out these plans
does not diminish the threat that Gold
Fields posed, or the reasonableness of the
Newmont directors' perception of that
threat.
Ivanhoe, however, assiduously
argues that the facts recited in Part II,
supra, of this Opinion, describing Gold
Fields' plans, intentions, and strategies in
response to Ivanhoe's offer, are based
solely upon the
Page 608 affidavits of Messrs. Agnew and Hitchens,
which affidavits, Ivanhoe contends, are
conclusory, self-serving, and inconsistent
with contemporaneous notes of Newmont and
Gold Fields meetings made during that
period. Because of those inconsistencies,
Ivanhoe urges that the affidavits not be
given probative weight.
I cannot agree. On a motion for a
preliminary injunction, the Court will
generally refuse to resolve inconsistencies
between affidavits and other evidence. Such
a determination is normally a matter for a
trial. Only in highly limited circumstances
might it be justifiable to disregard an
affidavit submitted in a preliminary
injunction context. See, e.g., Packer v.
Yampol, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8432, Jacobs, V.C.
(April 18, 1986) at 43 (conclusory
statements in affidavits of defendants not
credited where affidavits were facially
inconsistent with undisputed facts and where
defendants had the burden of proof on the
issue). Here the affidavits correspond to
the undisputed facts, and do not appear to
conflict with the notes relied upon by
Ivanhoe.
[13 Del. J. Corp. L. 719]
Finally, plaintiffs argue that even if Gold
Fields and Ivanhoe did pose a threat to
Newmont, the measures employed by the
defendants were unreasonable in relation to
the threat.
The reasonableness of the
defensive measures is separately analyzed,
first with respect to Ivanhoe and, second,
in relation to Gold Fields. As for Ivanhoe,
the defensive measures (the street sweep,
the dividend, and the restructuring) appear
(preliminarily) to be reasonable, even
though their effect would clearly be to
block the Ivanhoe offer. The dividend and
restructuring have not been shown to be
unreasonable responses, because while those
transactions might tend to defeat the
Ivanhoe offer, they created an alternative
benefit for shareholders in the form of
immediate cash and, arguably, an opportunity
to realize greater long term value on their
investment. And although a successful street
sweep would have the effect of defeating the
Ivanhoe offer, that transaction must be
viewed as a response by Gold Fields, not by
the Newmont Board. The record indicates that
Gold Fields was free after August 18 to
terminate the 1983 standstill agreement and
to acquire at least an additional 23% of
Newmont shares, and that it was, in fact,
prepared to do so, irrespective of what the
Newmont Board might or might not do.
Moreover, Gold Fields could have
accomplished this without the dividend.
Accordingly, the street sweep was Gold
Fields' response to the Ivanhoe threat, not
Newmont's. As thus viewed, the response was
reasonable, since Gold Fields was at all
times free to buy more Newmont stock to
protect its existing investment.
In relation to Gold Fields,
however, the reasonableness issue is more
complex. To eliminate the threat that Gold
Fields might seek to gain control (including
Board control) of Newmont, it was reasonable
for Newmont's directors to seek to limit
Gold Fields ability to purchase Newmont
stock to less than 50%, and to limit its
ability to use its de facto controlling
voting power to acquire de jure control.
Therefore, it does not appear unreasonable
for Newmont to have insisted upon a
standstill agreement that restricted Gold
Fields to a 49.9% stock ownership level,
that limited its power to elect directors to
a ceiling of 40% of the Board, and that
imposed reasonable restrictions upon Gold
Fields' ability to transfer its stock to a
third party free of the standstill
agreement. Because Gold Fields' willingness
to so restrict itself was conditioned upon
the dividend being declared (the dividend
itself was lawful, see Part IV B, supra ),
the dividend was also a reasonable defensive
measure.
However, it also appears that by
using the September 20 standstill agreement
as the means to keep the Gold Fields tiger
"in the cage," [13 Del. J. Corp. L. 720]
Newmont's directors went too far. The
September 20 standstill agreement, as
previously noted, bound Gold Fields to vote
its shares for the Newmont Board's
director-nominees, and it severely
restricted Gold Fields' ability to dispose
of its Newmont stock free of the standstill
restrictions. By thus 'locking up' Gold
Fields' 49.9% stock interest, the standstill
agreement guaranteed the incumbency
Page 609 of the Newmont Board (or their designees)
and, as a practical matter, assured the
defeat of any hostile takeover attempt for
possibly ten years. That agreement operated,
then, to entrench the Newmont Board. The
reasonable goals of limiting Gold Fields'
ability to acquire majority stock control
(and control of the Newmont Board) did not
require, for their accomplishment,
entrenching the Board and "locking up" the
company. In this respect plaintiffs have
shown that they will probably succeed on
their claim that those offending provisions
made the September 20 standstill agreement
unreasonable in relation to the threat posed
by Gold Fields.
The defendants argue that even if
those contractual provisions were offending
at the time of the temporary restraining
orders, they are no longer, because Gold
Fields and Newmont adopted (post-restraining
order) amendments to their standstill
agreement, on September 25, 1987. Those
amendments assume that Newmont's certificate
of incorporation will be amended to
authorize cumulative voting. The September
25 standstill agreement limits Gold Fields
from voting to elect more than 40% of the
Newmont Board. Gold Fields' votes in excess
of those needed to elect 40% of the Board
would be "passed through" to the independent
shareholders of Newmont, i.e., they will be
voted in exactly the same proportion as the
shares held by the independent shareholders.
In effect, the September 25th standstill
agreement appears to give the independent
stockholders (who own 50.1% of Newmont's
stock), the right to elect 60% of the Board,
and the power to replace all non-Gold Fields
directors.
Regarding restrictions on
transfer, the September 25 standstill
agreement permits Gold Fields to tender its
Newmont shares into any offer for all
outstanding shares of Newmont for which the
financing is firmly committed, and wherein
the offeror undertakes to pay in any second
step merger the highest consideration paid
under the tender offer. In such a case, Gold
Fields must give public notice ten days in
advance of its intention to tender its
shares.
The September 25th amendments to
the September 20 standstill agreement appear
to go far towards reducing, if not
eliminating altogether, the violations
preliminarily found to inhere in the
September 20 standstill agreement. But those
(September 25) amendments are [13 Del. J.
Corp. L. 721] relevant to the question of
remedy, not to the analysis of the
reasonableness of the defensive measures
under Unocal. That analysis is based upon
the facts that existed as of the time of the
September 21 and 22, 1987 street sweep.
Measured as of that time, the "lock up"
provisions of the September 20 standstill
agreement must be viewed (preliminarily) as
an unreasonable response in relation to the
threat posed. To that extent, those
provisions constituted a violation of the
Newmont directors' duties under Unocal, in
which Gold Fields, as a contracting party
that could not have been unaware of the
entrenchment effect of those provisions,
aided and abetted.
V. REMEDY
Having found preliminarily that
in agreeing to certain provisions of the
September 20 standstill agreement, the
defendants violated fiduciary duties, the
Court must now consider whether the relief
requested is an appropriate remedy under the
circumstances. The plaintiffs contend that
the appropriate remedy is the proposed
preliminary injunctive relief that would
undo the street sweep. For the reasons
discussed below, I cannot agree.
Just as a defensive antitakeover
measure cannot be unreasonable in relation
to the threat posed, so too, an injunctive
remedy should not be disproportionate or
excessive in relation to the specific harm
that it is intended to prevent:
But it very often happens that the award
of specific relief would inflict a hardship
on the defendant which is out of all
proportion to the injury its refusal would
cause to the plaintiff. In these cases, by
the great weight of authority, equity still
has discretion in adjusting the relief to be
awarded to the needs of the fact situation.
McClintock on Equity, (2nd Ed.) at page 51
(1948).
Page 610
That proposition, hardly
controversial, is simply a corollary of the
broader principle that an injunction must
not cause greater harm than it would
prevent.
In this case, the irreparable
harm to be averted is quite specific. It
consists of certain provisions of the
September 20 agreement which, if left
unchanged, would enable the present Newmont
Board to "lock up" voting control and defeat
any unsolicited takeover bid. That
threatened harm can be prevented by
enjoining in some appropriate manner the
implementation of the offending provisions
in the September 20 standstill agreement.
But the corporate defendants have [13 Del.
J. Corp. L. 722] already voluntarily amended
that agreement in order to eliminate its
offending aspects. As a result, the need for
preliminary injunctive relief has arguably
been obviated.
To enjoin Gold Fields'
now-completed stock purchases is
unnecessary. The street sweep was a legally
proper transaction that did not, by itself,
involve actionable wrongdoing. (See Part IV
(D), supra ) With or without a standstill
agreement, Gold Fields would likely have
purchased substantial additional Newmont
shares on the open market. To require Gold
Fields to divest its 23% block of Newmont
stock would not only undo an act that was
legally proper, and that would likely have
occurred irrespective of any standstill
agreement, but it would also effectively
grant plaintiffs all the relief they might
hope to gain after a final hearing. While
perhaps a case could arise where justice
might require that result, such a result
must normally be avoided at the preliminary
injunction stage. Thomas C. Marshall, Inc.
v. Holiday Inn, Inc., Del.Ch., 174 A.2d 27,
28 (1961); DiEleuterio v. Pennell, Del.Ch.,
C.A. No. 8294, Jacobs, V.C. (December 13,
1985) at 5.
The remaining question is
whether, in light of the September 25
standstill agreement, preliminary injunctive
restraints are now needed. Although the
plaintiffs question the precise legal effect
of the September 25, 1987 amendments, at
this stage I am satisfied that, with one
exception, those concerns do not warrant the
imposition of injunctive restraints. The
sole caveat relates to the ambiguity in the
agreement as to whether Gold Fields may
designate up to 40% of the Board (and
whether the independent shareholders may
elect the remaining 60%) prior to the time
that Newmont's certificate of incorporation
is formally amended to authorize cumulative
voting. That concern can be satisfied if the
parties are able (hopefully in the form of
order implementing the rulings made herein)
to agree upon arrangements that will either
preserve the status quo pendente lite as it
relates to the composition of the Board, or
will otherwise resolve the ambiguity in some
appropriate manner on an interim basis.
Unless and until the Court is advised that
the parties are unable to agree upon such
interim arrangements, it would not be
appropriate to impose preliminary injunctive
restraints.
For the foregoing reasons, the
plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary
injunction is denied and the temporary
restraining orders previously entered will
be vacated. Counsel are requested to submit
an appropriate form of order implementing
the rulings made herein.
1
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Carter
Hawley Hale Stores, Inc.,
760 F.2d 945 (9th
Cir.1985) ("defensive" street sweep by
target corporation held not violative of
Williams Act);
Hanson Trust PLC v. SCM Corporation,
774 F.2d 47 (2d Cir.1985) ("offensive"
street sweep by hostile acquiror held not
violative of the Williams Act); but see,
Wellman v. Dickinson,
475 F.Supp. 783
(S.D.N.Y.1979), aff'd,
682 F.2d 355 (2d
Cir.1982); cert. denied, 460 U.S. 1069, 103
S.Ct. 1522, 75 L.Ed.2d 946 (1983) (street
sweep by hostile acquiror under
circumstances found to constitute "tender
offer" in violation of Williams Act).
2 Except where otherwise noted, the
underlying facts are not disputed. Where
there are disputes, those disputes are
treated appropriately, i.e., with due regard
for the limitations of the preliminary
injunction procedure, including its
constraints upon fact-finding. (See, e.g.
pages 607-608 infra ).
3 Newmont's "inside" directors are
defendants Gordon R. Parker (Newmont's
Chairman and a Director of Consolidated Gold
Fields PLC), Edward P. Fontaine (Newmont's
Chief Financial Officer) and Richard B.
Leather (Newmont's General Counsel and
Executive Vice President). The "Gold Fields"
directors are defendants Rudolph I.J. Agnew
and Robin A. Plumbridge, who are
(respectively) the Chairman and Group Chief
Executive of Consolidated Gold Fields PLC
and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of
Gold Fields of South Africa, Ltd. The
independent directors of Newmont are
defendants Joseph P. Flannery (Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer of Uniroyal
Holdings, Inc.), Thomas A. Holmes (Chairman
and Chief Executive Officer of
Ingersoll-Rand Company), William B. Moses,
Jr., (retired Chairman of Massachusetts
Financial Services Company) and William I.M.
Turner (Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
of Consolidated-Bathhurst, Inc.)
4 By reason of Gold Fields' charter and
the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Act, Gold
Fields could not increase its ownership
interests beyond 49.9% unless it obtained
shareholder approval and clearance from the
London Stock Exchange and the United States
Department of Justice. The record indicates
that such approvals could be obtained in a
matter of weeks.
5 The first reaction was to approve, at
the August 18, 1987 Newmont Board meeting,
"golden parachute" agreements with 25 key
members of management. Those agreements
called for substantial severance payments if
an entity other than Gold Fields acquired
more than 20% of Newmont's outstanding
stock, or if Mr. Parker determined that a
takeover was imminent. Mr. Parker activated
those agreements at the Newmont Board
meeting held on September 10, 1987, two days
after Ivanhoe commenced its hostile tender
offer. As a consequence, Newmont paid $37
million into certain trust funds that had
been created to fund the agreements. The
validity of those agreements is not an issue
presently before the Court.
6 For Gold Fields it was vitally
important to have significant gold holdings
and investments in North America. To be left
as primarily a South African gold company
would adversely affect Gold Fields' world
market position and its standing in the
United Kingdom stock market.
7 At this point Newmont formally engaged
financial and legal advisors. Newmont
retained Goldman Sachs and Kidder, Peabody &
Co., Incorporated ("Kidder Peabody") to act
as financial advisors. It also retained the
New York firm of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen &
Katz, as well as its regular counsel, White
& Case, and the Wilmington firm of Potter
Anderson & Corroon, to act as legal
advisors. At the request of one of the
independent directors, the New York firm of
Debevoise and Plimpton was also retained to
act as counsel for the four independent
directors. These legal and financial
advisors attended many of the Newmont Board
meetings which are described herein.
8 Mr. Agnew's own privately held view,
which ultimately prevailed, was that Gold
Fields should retain its Newmont investment
even at a high cost. Because of the Gold
Fields executive directors' concerns about
making a significant expenditure, Mr. Agnew
authorized Gold Fields' management to
explore possible transactions in cooperation
with Newmont that would eliminate or reduce
Gold Fields' cost of increasing its holdings
in Newmont. Accordingly, ongoing discussions
between Gold Fields and Newmont
representatives took place throughout this
period.
9 As finally announced on September 11,
1987, the Gold Plan called for an increase
of gold production to a level of 1.6 million
ounces annually by 1990, and for
accelerating exploration and reserve
activities. Those increased estimates
provided a basis for Newmont's investment
bankers to increase their initial valuation
of Newmont stock. Plaintiffs suggest that
the increased estimates were made solely to
inflate the valuations, in order to justify
Newmont's directors taking the position that
Ivanhoe's offering price(s) were inadequate.
Plaintiffs also argue that that the
increased estimates lacked any objective
financial basis. It seems clear that the
Newmont Gold Plan and the increased
production estimates were part of Newmont's
strategy to defeat Ivanhoe, and that they
were timed with that objective in mind. The
present record does not, however, support a
conclusion that these increased estimates
were made without an objective financial
basis.
10 The following day (September 9)
Ivanhoe delivered to Newmont written
consents to reduce the number of Newmont
directors to three, and nominating three
persons for those positions.
11 The Board rejected the Ivanhoe offer
for the stated reasons that: (i) the offer
was inadequate in relation to the inherent
values in the company, which values had been |