| Page 770 542 A.2d 770  Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 93,726
In re J.P. STEVENS & CO., INC.
SHAREHOLDERS LITIGATION.
WEST POINT-PEPPERELL, INC., a Georgia
corporation, and STN
Holdings, Inc., a Delaware corporation,
Plaintiffs,
v.
J.P. STEVENS & CO., INC., a Delaware
corporation, Ward
Burns, E. Virgil Conway, Marvin B. Crow,
James B. Edwards,
Buck Mickel, Henry Ponder, Whitney Stevens,
David M. Tracy,
John J. Zerrenner, Odyssey Partners, a New
York partnership,
JPS Acquisition Corp., a Delaware
corporation and JPS
Holding Corp., a Delaware corporation,
Defendants. Civ. A. Nos. 9634, 9763.
Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: April 6, 1988.
Decided: April 8, 1988.
Page 771
Jack B. Blumenfeld, and Michael
Houghton, of Morris, Nichols, Arsht &
Tunnell, Wilmington, and Paul Vizcarrondo,
and Barbara Robbins, of Wachtell, Lipton,
Rosen & Katz, New York City, for plaintiffs
West Point-Pepperell and STN Holdings.
Joseph A. Rosenthal, and Carolyn
D. Mack, of Morris, Rosenthal, Monhait &
Gross, P.A., Wilmington, and Arthur N.
Abbey, and Judith L. Spanier, of Abbey &
Ellis, New York City, and Pamela S.
Tikellis, of Greenfield & Chimicles,
Wilmington, for Shareholder plaintiffs.
Rodman Ward, Andrew J. Turezyn,
and Constance S. Huttner, of Skadden, Arps,
Slate, Meagher & Flom, Wilmington, and New
York City, for defendants J.P. Stevens &
Co., Inc., and Conway, Edwards, Mickel,
Ponder, Furman, Wearn and Weinberg.
E. Norman Veasey, and Kevin G.
Abrams, of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, and Irwin Warren, Mark G. Krum,
and Timothy J. Lawliss, of Weil, Gotshal &
Manges, New York City, for
Page 772 defendants Odyssey Partners, JPS Holding
Corp. and JPS Acquisition Corp.
Grover C. Brown, and Henry N.
Herndon, Jr., of Morris, James, Hitchens &
Williams, Wilmington, and Raymond L. Falls,
Jr., and William M. Murphy, of Cahill Gordon
& Reindel, New York City, for defendants
Burns, Crow, Mitchell, Stevens and
Zerrenner.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
West Point-Pepperell, Inc. ("West
Point") is currently contesting with
affiliates of Odyssey Partners, a New York
partnership, for control of J.P. Stevens &
Co., Inc. ("Stevens"), a Delaware
corporation engaged principally in the
production and marketing of textile products
of various kinds. Both West Point and
Odyssey have tender offers currently
outstanding to the shareholders of Stevens.
Odyssey's offer, which is made through its
affiliates JPS Acquisitions Corp. and JPS
Holding Corp. (who together with Odyssey
Partners are referred to here simply as
"Odyssey"), is for up to all of the
Company's stock at $64 per share in cash,
subject to certain conditions. That offer
may close no sooner than midnight April 11,
1988. The board of directors of Stevens has
endorsed and recommended acceptance of the
Odyssey offer and has entered into an
agreement of merger with Odyssey. The West
Point offer is for $62.50 per share cash,
although West Point has stated its
willingness to pay $64 per share cash in a
transaction that the Stevens board would
endorse. West Point's offer is not subject
to a financing condition and may close no
sooner than April 21, 1988.
On March 25, 1988 West Point
commenced this action against Stevens, the
members of its board of directors, and
against Odyssey.
That suit was consolidated with
an earlier filed stockholder class action
seeking judicial review of the evolving
transaction in which Stevens would be sold.
Broadly speaking, the complaint
1 alleges that the board, in a
course of conduct over the last two months,
has breached its fiduciary duty to the
Stevens shareholders by repeatedly favoring
the Odyssey proposal, by placing expensive
impediments in the way of the West Point
proposals and ultimately in failing to
attempt, in good faith, to achieve the
highest available price for the shareholders
in a situation in which it is clear that the
Company is to be sold. This course of
conduct is said to plainly violate the duty
of directors as described in the important
case of Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings, Inc., Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173
(1986).
Odyssey Partners and its
affiliates are said to have knowingly
participated in the alleged wrongs and, as a
result, to be jointly liable with the
individual defendants for their
consequences.
The complaint seeks several forms
of relief. First, it seeks a declaratory
judgment that certain financial obstacles to
another, higher bid by Stevens, which
allegedly are created by the amended merger
agreement (provisions that provide for
reimbursement of expenses and for a
so-called "topping fee"), be declared
invalid and the Company enjoined from
complying with them. Second, the complaint
seeks to have this court order that a
corrective disclosure be made to rectify
certain allegedly misleading statements or
omissions in the Company's Schedule 14D-9
filed under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934. Third, it is asked that the court
preliminarily enjoin completion of the
Odyssey offer for a reasonable but brief
period in order to allow dissemination of
the corrective disclosure and in order to
permit West Point to consider making
another, higher, offer with the use of
Company confidential information that was,
until recently, (allegedly) wrongfully
withheld from West Point, but not from
Odyssey.
A further description of the
legal theories offered to justify this
powerful relief and the arguments of
defendants that purport to show that no
relief is warranted in
Page 773 these circumstances will be deferred until a
statement of the pertinent facts as they
appear at this time can be set forth.
I.
1. Stevens' Board Receives an Unsolicited
Leveraged Buy-out Proposal from the
Company's Management.
By late January, 1988, the senior
management of Stevens had resolved to
attempt to acquire ownership of the Company
in a new entity to be formed by them and
other investors. There had been earlier
studies of this sort of alternative by the
Company's long-term investment banker,
Goldman, Sachs. Stevens Dep. at 33. On
January 27, Whitney Stevens, the Company's
chief executive officer, called Virgil
Conway, a veteran outside director of the
Company and asked if Mr. Conway could
interrupt his vacation to attend a special
board meeting on February 7th in New York,
where the Company's executive offices are
located. Conway Dep. at 19-21. Mr. Stevens
stated that it was likely that an LBO
proposal would be made at that time by a
management group.
The February 7 meeting was
attended by eleven Stevens directors and by
representatives of the Skadden, Arps law
firm and the investment banking firm of
Goldman, Sachs, both of whom were apparently
invited to attend by management. At that
time, the Stevens board of directors
received a buy-out proposal from Palmetto,
Inc., a company formed by members of
Stevens' senior management. Palmetto sought
to acquire Stevens for $38 in cash and $5 in
junior subordinated debentures per Stevens
share. The board responded by appointing a
Special Committee, comprised of all seven
outside Company directors, to consider the
Palmetto proposal and to make
recommendations to the full Stevens board
with respect to it. The Special Committee
was also charged to consider and make
recommendations with respect to any other
available alternatives, including proposals
from third parties. A press release
disclosing all of this was made on February
9, 1988.
2. An Auction for Stevens Rapidly
Develops.
On February 23, 1988, after
reviewing publicly available financial data,
West Point's chairman sent a letter to the
Special Committee stating that West Point
was considering a proposal that would "yield
a price to your stockholders substantially
exceeding the price proposed by the
management group, as well as the current
market price." Lanier Aff. Exh. A at 1. That
letter requested that Stevens provide West
Point with certain non-public business
information and indicated a willingness to
enter into an appropriate confidentiality
agreement in that connection.
On the advice of the Special
Committee's legal counsel, Mr. Conway, who
had been named chairman of that committee,
did not respond to West Point's February 23
letter, but awaited the next scheduled
meeting of the committee, then scheduled for
March 1.
On February 29, West Point sent a
second letter to the Special Committee in
which it proposed that it acquire Stevens
for $56 in cash per share for all shares.
Significantly, that letter stated that the
West Point offer would not be conditioned on
the availability of financing and stated
that a proposed merger agreement "would
contain only customary conditions." Finally,
the February 29 letter indicated that $56
was not West Point's final bid. It stated
that "all aspects of our proposal, including
the price, are open to negotiation."
The next day, following the March
1 meeting, the Special Committee announced
the receipt of three bids: the $56 cash bid
from West Point; a revised proposal from
Palmetto for consideration consisting of $40
in cash, $10 in junior subordinated
debentures and $5 of "payment in kind"
preferred stock; and a third unidentified
bid at a price less than $56. Lanier Aff. p
8. In fact, Odyssey Partners was the third
bidder and it had sent to the Special
Committee a February 29 proposal
contemplating a $51 cash transaction but
noting its willingness to consider a higher
price if a review of non-public information
warranted such an increase.
Page 774
Since West Point is engaged in
some of the same businesses as
Stevens--notably the home furnishings
textile business (mainly sheets and
towels)--evaluation of its proposal involved
a consideration of possible antitrust
concerns not presented by the other two
offers. Based on publicly available
information, the committee's legal advisors
gave a preliminary view to the committee at
its March 1 meeting that a merger between
West Point and Stevens would "raise serious
antitrust concerns" (Stoll Aff. p 7), that
those concerns "might be eliminated by
curative divestiture of substantial assets"
(Id., p 8), and that, in all events, those
concerns might be expected to "delay a
merger ... for a substantial period" (Id., p
10). It was there concluded by counsel that
specific information concerning West Point's
plans would be necessary to better evaluate
this risk. The Special Committee directed
its legal and financial advisors to contact
West Point's advisors to ascertain and
evaluate such plans.
This need was not easily
satisfied because West Point, who early and
consistently expressed a willingness to
solve any antitrust problem, could not very
well form a specific divestiture plan
without knowing just what assets producing
what products and accountable for what
revenue would be acquired in a successful
offer. But this information--disclosed in
Stevens' non-public documents--would not be
made available unless West Point agreed to a
confidentiality and standstill agreement
(explained below) which it felt unable to
agree to.
Nevertheless, in attempting to
address the antitrust concerns, West Point
did, on March 3, enter into an agreement in
principle with Greenwood Mills, Inc., a
South Carolina textile firm, to sell certain
Stevens assets to Greenwood. When the
Special Committee's lawyers next met with
West Point on this subject, on March 9, the
details of any such divestiture were not
disclosed (perhaps because West Point was
still not in a position to have determined
them).
3. The Second Round of Bids by West
Point, Odyssey and the Management Group.
Meanwhile, some time in the
middle of the week of March 7th, having
signed the required confidentiality and
standstill agreement, representatives of
Odyssey met with the Company's management.
At that meeting, Odyssey indicated that
management participation in Odyssey's
efforts was not required and Mr. Stevens
indicated that Palmetto would continue with
its efforts to gain control of Stevens.
Young Aff. p 5.
Also during that week, the
various bidders were advised that the
Special Committee would be meeting soon to
consider the proposal to acquire Stevens and
stated that, if they had anything to say,
they should do so by Friday, March 11.
Lanier Aff. p 16. On March 11, West Point
sent a letter to the Special Committee
revising the terms of its earlier
acquisition proposal. It now stated that it
was prepared to pay $60.50 cash per share.
There were no proposals in the letter
concerning lock-up arrangements or fees to
be paid to West Point if the transaction
were agreed to but not consummated because a
higher deal came along. Nor were there
expense reimbursement provisions. West Point
included a proposed form of merger agreement
which obligated both sides to use their best
efforts to effect the sale of all assets
that might be required to be divested to
avoid the entry of an injunction against the
acquisition, provided that West Point would
not be required to commit to any divestiture
of assets having a fair market value in
excess of $200 million.
Also on March 11, Palmetto, the
instrumentality of the senior management
group, offered consideration per share of
$43 in cash, $10 in market value of junior
subordinated debentures and $5 in market
value of payment in kind preferred stock.
Odyssey now offered $60 per share in cash.
Its letter also indicated that it would like
to discuss equity participation by the
Company's management when the board thought
that appropriate. Odyssey, it should be
noted, is not an operating company and it
has no capacity internally to manage an
Page 775 enterprise such as Stevens, although some of
its investors have a background in the
textile industry. Its proposal was subject
to arranging financing.
At a meeting of the Special
Committee on March 11, its legal counsel,
after reporting on the contacts to date
concerning the antitrust problem, continued
to be of the view that more specific
information on a divestiture plan was
necessary in order to evaluate the antitrust
risk. In response to a question, however, he
stated the view that "there was a twenty
percent (20%) risk that a West Point
transaction would not be consummated." Stoll
Aff. p 15.
In a further effort to define the
dimensions of this problem, representatives
of West Point met with the Special Committee
on March 12. West Point now attempted to
assure the Special Committee that any
antitrust problem with its proposal could
easily be dealt with, by announcing that it
would agree to divest up to 50% of Stevens'
towel production capacity and up to 20% of
its sheet production capacity. In addition,
West Point's representatives disclosed the
identity of the prospective purchaser of the
Stevens assets (Greenwood). Also, the
agreement in principle was shown to the
Special Committee's representatives. On
March 13, the Special Committee was given
written assurance that West Point would
guarantee the financing of the Greenwood
purchase of the Stevens assets to be sold
under the agreement in principle.
4. A Third Round of Bidding and the Board
Meeting of March 13.
On Sunday, March 13, West Point
sent a letter to the Special Committee
enclosing a revised form of merger
agreement. That further proposal revised the
antitrust compliance provisions of the
agreement to require the divestiture of up
to 50% of Stevens' towel business, up to 20%
of its sheet business and all other assets
(not used in the towel or sheet businesses)
necessary to avoid the entry of an
injunction. In addition, it offered to pay
Stevens $15 million if West Point was
ultimately unable to acquire Stevens for any
reason other than Stevens' breach or the
receipt of a financially superior proposal
to acquire Stevens. The West Point proposal
continued to contain no provisions for
reimbursement of fees, for lock-ups or break
up fees or other expenses to be borne by
Stevens. Later that same day, after being
advised that all bids were required to be
sealed, West Point submitted its sealed bid
in the amount of $62.50 per share for all
Stevens shares.
The Special Committee also
received further bids from the other two
bidders at that time. Palmetto offered a
package for each share consisting of $43 in
cash, $10 in junior subordinated debentures
and $5 in preferred stock and a non-voting
common equity interest in Palmetto which had
a projected market value of $4, or $62 in
total per share if one accepts Palmetto's
financial advisor's view of the value of the
various paper components in the proposal.
Goldman, Sachs, however, evaluated it as
worth less than $60. Odyssey offered $61 in
cash, subject, as before, to getting the
cash.
2
At a meeting on March 13, the
Special Committee rejected the management
proposal in light of Goldman, Sachs' advice
as to value. Skadden, Arps' representatives
then summarized the results of the meetings
concerning antitrust problems and expressed
the view that a basis for serious concern
existed in that antitrust problems could
delay or prevent a merger between Stevens
and West Point, notwithstanding the
Greenwood agreement in principle, and the
undertaking to divest 50% of Stevens' towel
production and 20% of its sheet production.
Stoll Aff. pp 18-21; Conway Aff. pp 22-23.
Goldman, Sachs attempted to
quantify a stock market discount for delay
of the duration referred to by legal
counsel; it expressed the view that a $2-$3
per share
Page 776 discount could be expected. Stoll Aff. p 25.
Goldman, Sachs further opined that the
Company could experience losses greater than
$15 million if the Odyssey proposal were
rejected and the West Point deal failed
ultimately to be accomplished. See Conway
Aff. p 24.
After meeting briefly with West
Point's senior management, see Lanier Aff. p
22, the Special Committee decided that
Odyssey's proposal at $61 per share
presented a better deal--more likely to
close and to do so sooner--than West Point's
$62.50 proposal. Conway Aff. p 29. The
Special Committee then authorized its
advisors to seek whatever more could be
obtained from Odyssey. Further negotiations
that night yielded an adjusted proposal of
$61.50 per share. The Special Committee also
managed to get Odyssey to agree to drop its
demand for a "topping fee" and forego
reimbursement of expenses if it had not
obtained financing commitments by March 18.
The committee did accede to the request for
a reimbursement of expenses (including
substantial expenses involved with raising
approximately $1 billion in debt financing)
not to exceed ($17 million or $1 per share).
In return for the increase in
share price, Odyssey asked that the next
quarterly dividend not be paid. The Special
Committee and Odyssey compromised by
agreeing that a dividend of up to $.30 per
share could be declared on April 18, 1988 if
shares had not been purchased under an
Odyssey tender offer at that time. Conway
Aff. p 30. The Special Committee did not go
back to West Point to see if it would pay
more. To do so, it is said, "would have
violated the procedures established by the
Special Committee for dealing with the final
bids." Conway Aff. p 29.
Shortly after midnight, Stevens'
counsel informed West Point's counsel that
Stevens had signed an agreement to merge
with an unidentified third party bidder;
Stevens' counsel refused to divulge the
price or other terms of the arrangement. The
following morning, Stevens announced in a
press release that it had signed a merger
agreement with affiliates of Odyssey and
that the acquisition price was $61.50 per
share. Lanier Aff. p 24.
On March 15, 1988, Odyssey's
affiliates commenced a tender offer for
Stevens shares at $61.50 per share. The
merger agreement entered into between
Stevens and Odyssey contained, as is
customary currently, a "fiduciary out"
clause permitting the Company to terminate
its obligation to effectuate the merger in
the event that a higher bid is received. On
March 16, West Point again requested access
to non-public information that had
previously been furnished to Odyssey. The
letter stated that the information would be
used by West Point's advisors to assist it
in determining "whether to propose an
acquisition of Stevens on terms more
favorable to your stockholders than our
earlier $62.50 per share cash proposal." The
Special Committee responded that, under the
merger agreement, it was obligated to obtain
Odyssey's consent before providing any
confidential information to West Point and
that Odyssey was unwilling to waive its
right to object.
5. West Point Responds With A Public
Tender Offer And The Prospect of Yet Another
Increase In Price.
On March 24, 1988 West Point
entered into a definitive agreement with NTC
Group, Inc. ("NTC"), the parent company of a
textile manufacturing firm, that
contemplated the sale of a portion of
Stevens' towel and sheet manufacturing
facilities and related assets. Also on that
day, West Point and NTC formed a limited
partnership, Magnolia Partners, L.P., for
the purpose of making a tender offer for
Stevens. That same day, March 24, 1988,
Magnolia sent a letter to the Stevens board
of directors stating its intention to
promptly commence a tender offer for Stevens
at $62.50 per share. That letter added,
however, that Magnolia would increase its
price to $64 per share for an aggregate of
approximately $45 million over the then
current Odyssey offer, if Stevens entered
into a merger agreement with Magnolia by
April 5, 1988. The letter noted that the
Magnolia offer was not conditioned on
financing and that, based on the advice of
Page 777 West Point's counsel, the arrangement with
NTC "eliminated any antitrust concerns" and
made it "virtually certain" that the
transaction would be consummated.
On March 25, 1988, Magnolia
commenced its tender offer, which is not
conditioned on financing and is scheduled to
expire on April 21, 1988.
On March 25, 1988, West Point
commenced this action seeking, among other
relief, an order directing Stevens and the
Special Committee to maintain a level
playing field by furnishing to plaintiffs
the same non-public information they had
given to Odyssey.
6. The Circumstances Concerning Access To
Non-Public Information.
Up until late March, West Point
had been unsuccessful in gaining access to
any non-public information of Stevens. From
early in the month, counsel for the Special
Committee had refused to make any non-public
information available unless West Point
first agreed to sign an agreement that
contained a standstill provision. That
provision would have prohibited West Point
for a period of one year from either (a)
acquiring or offering to acquire any Stevens
voting shares; (b) proposing to Stevens or
its shareholders, or publicly announcing,
any transaction involving Stevens or its
shareholders or seeking control of Stevens
through a proxy fight or otherwise (except
after a prior written invitation by the
Special Committee to make a proposal); or
(c) assisting or encouraging any third party
in acquiring Stevens shares or assets
without the Special Committee's prior
written consent. This proposal, however, did
contain an exception that would have
permitted West Point to make a proposal to
purchase all outstanding shares of Stevens
common stock if (1) Stevens previously
executed a definitive acquisition agreement
with a third party; and (2) West Point's bid
was higher than that in the third party's
contract. See Young Aff. Exh. C. Odyssey had
signed an agreement of this kind before
being afforded access to Stevens' non-public
information.
From March 25 to March 28,
counsel for West Point and for the Special
Committee attempted to negotiate the terms
under which West Point might obtain access
to Stevens financial information that
Odyssey had been provided. No agreement was
reached. Then, at 5:30 p.m. on March 28, an
agreement was signed giving West Point
officers access to Stevens data pursuant to
a confidentiality agreement. This
confidentiality agreement, while similar to
that signed by Odyssey, more specifically
identified the circumstances in which West
Point could extend proposals to
shareholders, without board approval: West
Point could make such a proposal if the
proposal was for all of the common stock on
a fully diluted basis for at least $62.50
per share in cash. Lanier Aff. p 35.
7. The March 28 Meeting of the Special
Committee to Address Further Possibilities.
As West Point later found out, on
that same evening, the Special Committee was
meeting yet again, this time to consider a
further revised Stevens proposal from
Odyssey in response to West Point's
suggestion of a $64 price. That revision
also provided for Odyssey to receive a
"topping fee" of 20% of any amount over $64
that the shareholders ultimately realized
(with an $8 million--or $.40 per
share--cap), and sought an increase in the
reimbursement of expenses from $17 million
to $19 million.
Lastly, the amended merger
agreement modified the termination
provisions of the merger agreement. The
merger agreement had provided that the
Stevens board could not terminate its
agreement with Odyssey unless a higher bid
were made by third parties, and then, only
after Odyssey had been given seven business
days to make an even higher bid itself. The
amended merger agreement enhanced this
timing advantage by extending the period
during which Odyssey can top any competing
offer from seven business days after the
competing bidder's waiting period under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino Act has expired. This
provision operates to prevent Stevens from
terminating the amended merger agreement at
any time during which West
Page 778 Point is in the Hart-Scott-Rodino filing
process, thereby effectively preventing West
Point from ever being able to receive
Stevens' cooperation in receiving federal
antitrust clearance.
The Special Committee's advisors
were told by Odyssey that its proposal had
to be accepted on the 28th or it would
lapse, and that it would be automatically
retracted if the committee informed West
Point of Odyssey's latest proposal. Before
entering into that revised agreement, the
Special Committee negotiated the expense
reimbursement back down to its previous
level and again heard from its legal counsel
on the subject of antitrust. He reported
that West Point's plan, insofar as he could
learn of it after inquiry, continued to
involve "significant legal uncertainties"
(Conway Aff. p 35); that West Point had not
cooperated in seeking Federal Trade
Commission guidance (Stoll Aff. p 29); and
that West Point refused a contract provision
obligating it to divest whatever assets the
Federal Trade Commission found to be
problematic from an antitrust perspective.
The Special Committee, and
thereafter the board, approved the revised
proposal. It concluded that the risks
presented by the antitrust concerns
continued to render West Point's proposal
less advantageous to Stevens shareholders.
It did not go back to West Point to inquire
whether it would pay yet more. The revised
merger contract does, however, contain a
"fiduciary out" clause and the board remains
free to accept a bona fide higher offer.
8. West Point's Expressed Interest In
Raising Its Bid.
West Point has not raised its
tender offer to $64, but it has expressed
willingness to do so. It has further
represented in court that if the court
strikes down the reimbursement of fees
provision and the topping fee provision, it
will further increase its offer to pay to
shareholders the amount that would otherwise
be paid by the Company to Odyssey under
those provisions.
II.
In order to grant a preliminary
injunction, it is necessary for the court to
conclude that plaintiff has established a
reasonable probability of ultimate success
on the claims asserted, that, absent such
relief, plaintiff is faced with a prospect
of irreparable injury that will occur before
final judgment is likely to be reached, and
that, in balancing the overall equities
present, no likely untoward consequence to
the defendant or to other legitimate
interests affected, outweighs the threat of
irreparable harm to the plaintiff. See
Ivanhoe Partners v. Newmont Mining Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1334 (1987). For the
reasons stated below, I find it unnecessary
to address any aspect of this matter other
than the probability of ultimate success on
the merits of the claims asserted.
III.
It seems hardly an exaggeration
to say that plaintiffs' argument--highly
textured and specific as it is--begins and
ends with the Delaware Supreme Courts's
opinion in Revlon. It is contended that it
is incontestably true that Stevens is for
sale and that, in that circumstance, the
directors' duty is simply to get the highest
available price. That duty, it is said, was
violated in at least three specific ways.
First, non-public information was kept from
West Point while provided to other bidders.
This created problems for West Point that
ultimately provided the pretext for the
directors selecting a lower bid in the face
of West Point's higher bid. Second, the
reimbursement of expenses provision agreed
to on March 13 ($1 per share) is said to
have impermissibly impeded the auction
process and to have constituted a breach of
duty. Third, it is said that the topping fee
agreed to on March 28 also acted to impede
the auction and thus, under the teaching of
Revlon, to have constituted a breach of
duty.
Two very different arguments can
be and are made by applying some reading of
Revlon to these facts. First, Revlon can be
seen as a case essentially involving a board
that, if not disloyal to shareholder
Page 779 interests, was in a conflict situation. This
divided loyalty (divided, that is, at the
least between note holders and the
stockholders, see 506 A.2d at 184, and
perhaps between management and shareholders,
see, e.g., MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings,
Inc. v. Revlon, Inc., Del.Ch., 501 A.2d
1239, 1249 (1985): "What motivated the
Revlon directors to end the auction with so
little objective improvement?") justified
the court, under conventional doctrine, in
reviewing the substantive fairness of the
various board actions there taken.
Alternatively, Revlon may be viewed as a
case in which a finding of divided loyalty
did not play a critical part. On this view,
the case establishes some rules about the
kind of agreements that may not be entered
during an auction for corporate control
(e.g., those that will stop the bidding or
will favor one bidder over another) even by
a disinterested, fully functioning board or,
at the least, will call forth active
judicial review of the wisdom or fairness of
such contracts.
In this action, the class action
plaintiffs emphasize the alleged bad faith
of the Special Committee which would fit
their conception within the first view of
Revlon, and West Point emphasizes the second
view of Revlon. It is, therefore,
appropriate to return to the facts of this
case to assess whether it now appears
reasonably likely that it might be found
that the Special Committee's actions were
infected with an inappropriate motivation,
as plaintiff contends. After resolution of
that matter, we will return to the second
view of the law described above.
IV.
The description of the facts set
forth above reflects a view derived from the
depositions and affidavits submitted on the
motion. It is, of course, not complete, but
in many respects the foregoing is not
contested. The question of the Special
Committee's good faith or motivation is a
factual matter that is critically important
and most warmly contested, however.
West Point's essential position
factually is that the Special Committee
acted throughout to protect the interests of
the Company's management. In the face of
offers clearly better than Palmetto's offer,
it could not endorse a Palmetto proposal,
but it could do the next best thing. It
could push the transaction towards Odyssey.
Odyssey would be regarded by management as
greatly to be preferred over West Point
because Odyssey (a) had no real capacity to
run Stevens, (b) had indicated it wanted the
current management to stay on, and (c) had
indicated a willingness to discuss equity
participation by management. Thus, Odyssey,
rather than being an arm's-length bidder, as
West Point is, appears in this version to be
a white knight, favored by management and by
a Special Committee that vibrates
sympathetically to management's desires.
Maybe that is true; it surely is plausible.
For example, one is left with the suspicion
that the need to reach a final decision may
not have been so great as to require the
Special Committee to decide by March 13th to
sign a merger agreement, when another month
might have resolved the antitrust question
that presented the reason for preferring a
lower offer. And if one is inclined to
second guess board decisions, the decision
to agree to a $1 per share break-up payment
on March 13 seems a likely candidate for
review. Odyssey had just submitted a
proposal materially lower than West Point.
If Odyssey really wanted to acquire the
Company, how much leverage did it have, in
those circumstances, to insist on a $17
million break-up fee? So the claim that the
real purpose of that fee provision was to
disadvantage West Point is not altogether
hollow. And why did the Special Committee so
easily accept Odyssey's threat to retract
its March 28th $64 offer, if it was not
accepted immediately? Would not the
practicality of the matter suggest to the
Special Committee that if Odyssey was
willing to pay $64 on the 28th, it would be
willing to do so a few days later?
Other legitimate questions could
be asked, but, in the end, plaintiffs'
plausible story is not, in my opinion,
sufficiently supported by the evidence at
this time to permit the conclusion that it
is reasonably likely that at trial it would
be found that
Page 780 the Special Committee sought to promote the
interests of management by advantaging
Odyssey at the possible expense of the
shareholders. There is no direct evidence of
bad faith. The Special Committee did
negotiate the reimbursement provision down
on March 28 and successfully resisted the
request for a topping fee when it was first
presented on the 13th. While the topping fee
has a negative aspect from the shareholders'
point of view, as more fully explained
below, if one could conclude that Odyssey
would stick on that point, then it clearly,
on balance, was a benefit to shareholders.
Moreover, the fact that the Special
Committee meets all of the formal or
structural characteristics of a board that
is properly functioning--it is comprised of
persons without a financial conflict of
interest, it is well advised and appears
diligent in carrying out its mission--means
that something more than the suspicions upon
which West Point's plausible account is
based is necessary to conclude that bad
faith is likely to be found here.
Accordingly, I decide the pending
motion on the basis that the Special
Committee in fact acted in good faith in
conducting the auction process that
commenced on February 23rd.
V.
Given the inability to conclude
provisionally at this stage that the Stevens
board, functioning through its Special
Committee, was inappropriately motivated in
conducting the auction, the question
becomes, in my mind, whether its actions in
granting to Odyssey the contract rights in
question are protected by the business
judgment rule. See Pogostin v. Rice,
Del.Supr., 480 A.2d 619, 627 (1984); Revlon, 506 A.2d 173, 180;
Buffalo Forge Co. v. Ogden Corp., 717 F.2d
757 (2d Cir.1983). In that connection, I
note preliminarily that, as currently
viewed, this case involves neither a
self-dealing transaction, see, e.g.,
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983), nor corporate measures designed
to defeat a threatened change in control,
see Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co.,
Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946 (1985); Ivanhoe
Partners v. Newmont Mining Corp., Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1334 (1987). Thus, I do not regard
myself as authorized by Unocal or any other
precedent of this court or the Supreme Court
to pass upon the reasonableness of the
judgment to grant the topping fee or the
expense reimbursement provision, except in
one respect.
Stated generally, the business
judgment rule provides that a decision
3 made by an
independent board will not give rise to
liability (nor will it be the proper subject
of equitable remedies) if it is made in good
faith and in the exercise of due care.
4 This means that
ordinarily the policy of the rule prevents
substantive review of the merits of a
business decision made in good faith and
with due care. These are, of course, good
reasons to minimize such substantive review.
As I recently had occasion to note:
Because businessmen and women are
correctly perceived as possessing skills,
information and judgment not possessed by
reviewing courts and because there is great
social utility in encouraging the allocation
of assets and the evaluation and assumption
of economic risk by those with such skill
and information, courts have long been
reluctant to second-guess such decisions
when they appear to have been made in good
faith.
Solash v. Telex Corp., Del.Ch.,
C.A. Nos. 9518, 9528, 9525, Allen, C. (Jan.
19, 1988) [Current] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p
93,608, at 97,727 (Del.Ch., Jan. 19, 1988).
A court may, however, review the
substance of a business decision made by an
apparently well motivated board for the
limited purpose of assessing whether that
decision is so far beyond the bounds of
reasonable judgment that it seems
essentially inexplicable on any ground other
than
Page 781 bad faith.
5 As
shown below, I have considered the substance
of the decision to grant the rights here in
question, in the context of all of the
circumstances, to the limited extent
necessary to see if they are so beyond the
bounds of reasonable judgment in the
circumstances as to give rise to an
inference of bad faith.
Accordingly, if Revlon is
explained as a breach of loyalty case (i.e.,
one in which the board appeared not to be
acting in good faith for the shareholders'
benefit), which is how I read it, the
provisional finding of good faith in this
case is a critical difference between that
case and this one. That finding, moreover,
supplies one of the critical elements to the
application of the business judgment rule.
Given the standard of care required of
directors (see Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805 (1984)) and the apparently
attentive and conscientious way in which the
Special Committee carried out, or I should
say, is carrying out its duties, I cannot
conclude that plaintiffs have shown a
reasonable likelihood of success on a claim
that the defendant directors have violated
their duty of care or of loyalty.
VI.
West Point does not, however,
make its argument in business judgment
terms. Its principal argument is that the
reimbursement of expenses provision in the
amended merger agreement and the "topping"
fee provision in that agreement are both
invalid because they contravene a duty
recognized by the Delaware Supreme Court in
Revlon that arises once it is apparent that
a change in control of the corporation is to
occur. That duty is said to be a duty to
act, in that setting, only to get the
highest possible price for the shareholders
and for no other purpose. More to the point
here, West Point claims that Revlon mandates
that once an auction process for corporate
control is in progress, no action may be
taken by a board that would tend to impede
the achievement of the highest possible
price for the shareholders. A further
extension of the proposition that West Point
urges is that it is the duty of the board in
that setting to keep a "level playing field"
among potential bidders and, at least where
both are offering cash, not to favor one
over another.
It is said that the reimbursement
provision and the topping fee provision
together have the effect of saddling the
Company with up to $1.40 per share in
additional liabilities and, thus, of
precluding West Point, or any other bidder,
excepting Odyssey, from paying to the
shareholders the top price it might
otherwise be willing to pay for acquisition
of all the Company's shares. Since a
"topping" fee arrangement and the
reimbursement of expenses will, it would
seem, inevitably have such an effect, it
would seem a logical inference from West
Point's position that, where an auction
process is going forward, such provisions
will inevitably offend the principles of the
Revlon case, as so understood. I do not so
understand that case, however.
Revlon recognizes that once a
change in control is concededly in the
works, the responsibility of the board is
limited to a facilitating and achieving the
best possible transaction for the
shareholders.
6
Revlon, however, does not purport to
restrict the
Page 782 powers of a disinterested board from
entering into agreements of the kind here
under attack if, in doing so, the board acts
in good faith and with appropriate care.
While it is true, that once agreements of
this kind are in place, they do have the
effect of tilting the playing field in favor
of the holder of such rights, that fact,
alone, does not establish that they
necessarily are not in the best interest of
shareholders. It is the shareholders to whom
the board owes a duty of fairness, not to
persons seeking to acquire the Company. To
continue with the metaphor, the board may
tilt the playing field if, but only if, it
is in the shareholders' interest to do so.
The circumstances of the
agreement on the topping fee arrangement in
this case conclusively demonstrate the fact
that an agreement that has the effect of
advantaging one bidder may, in some
circumstances, benefit shareholders, at
least if one assumes that the request for
such a topping fee provision was a material
part of the consideration inducing Odyssey
to make its March 28 proposal. While this
seems apparent, it might nevertheless be
useful to dilate upon it for a moment.
As of March 28, the Special
Committee had in hand a merger agreement
contemplating $61.50 cash per Stevens share.
It also had an indication that another
bidder, West Point, was willing to go to $64
per share. There were no other bidders
willing to compete at levels above $61.50.
Failure to get Odyssey to increase its offer
to $64 would have meant that, even if the
Special Committee could have succeeded in
getting West Point to legally commit itself
to a $64 deal, there was no reasonable
prospect for another bidder forcing the
bidding beyond that point. If, however,
Odyssey could be induced to increase its
offer to $64, two bidders were left in the
game willing to pay at least that price.
7 A prospect for a
price greater than $64, thus, still
remained. It therefore appeared critical, in
order to possibly achieve a price in excess
of $64, to get Odyssey up to that price. If,
in order to do so, it required a topping fee
calculated as a percentage of amounts
realized above $64, it was not unreasonable
for the Special Committee to conclude that
the shareholders could only gain by granting
that fee and could lose nothing. The
shareholders would end up, on say March
29th, with a committed cash deal at $64, the
highest price that anyone had suggested up
until that time, and would maintain a
prospect for further bidding among two
still-active candidates. Failure to get
Odyssey to $64 would have terminated the
matter with West Point's $64 bid (assuming
it could be realized should Odyssey be seen
as unwilling to go above $61.50).
Thus, even though the topping fee
provision clearly does have the effect of
favoring Odyssey in the bidding and may
preclude West Point from offering a price
that it might otherwise offer, that
provision is not, in my opinion,
inconsistent with the board's duty to seek
the best available transaction for the
shareholders and to seek no other purpose.
8
West Point, however, claims that
the factual predicate for an analysis of
this kind is flawed. It claims that Odyssey
never asserted that the topping fee
agreement was a condition to its raising its
offer and that, unless one concludes that it
was such a condition, the granting of the
topping fee amounts to, in essence, a form
of waste. That is, there is no valid
justification for it unless one concludes
that it was an essential term from Odyssey's
point of view.
Page 783 West Point adds, of course, that the real
justification was a desire to favor Odyssey
so that it would prevail in the contest,
which was a result that the management of
Stevens would prefer.
But with this argument, West
Point inescapably enters the zone of the
business judgment rule. If there were no
basis for the Special Committee to conclude
that the topping fee was a material term in
Odyssey's proposal, then it would be
difficult to understand what proper
corporate purpose would be served by
granting it.
9 I
cannot conclude, however, that the Special
Committee could not, in the circumstances,
reasonably conclude that the topping fee was
indeed a material element of the
consideration inducing Odyssey to increase
its bid. A provision of this kind had once
before been sought by Odyssey, but the
Special Committee had resisted it in
connection with the March 13 Odyssey
proposal. It was again included in the March
28 proposal. The board's advisors were told
(and I think it is fair to infer that they
reported to the Special Committee) that that
offer had to be accepted on March 28 in
order for such acceptance to be binding upon
Odyssey. In these circumstances, reasonable
directors, exercising honest, informed
judgment, might differ as to what course of
action would most likely maximize
shareholder interests. One could have gone
back to Odyssey and sought to negotiate not
only the requested increase in reimbursement
fees (which was done), but also the topping
provision. Alternatively, it was not beyond
the range of reasonable responses, in the
circumstances in which the overall objective
at that time was to get a committed deal at
$64 per share cash from Odyssey, to accept
that provision in an effort to achieve that
objective. These are precisely the sort of
debatable questions that are beyond the
expertise of courts and which the business
judgment rule generally protects from
substantive review for wisdom. Certainly,
the decision to accede to the topping fee in
these circumstances does not fall so far
afield of the expected range of responses to
warrant an inference that the Special
Committee must have been motivated by a
concern other than maximizing the value of
shareholders' interests. In so concluding, I
find relevant the specific terms of the fee
formula, its cap, and the time when in the
bidding process it was agreed to, together
with all other surrounding circumstances.
The foregoing treats the topping
fee. But similar considerations govern the
other contractual impediment to West Point's
higher bid--the break-up fee. As to that $17
million termination fee, I can perceive no
basis at this time to conclude that, in
agreeing to it, the board (or the Special
Committee) breached a duty to seek to
achieve the best available deal for the
shareholders. Such agreements are reasonably
conventional and are, of course, not invalid
per se. Revlon at p. 183. They may, of
course, be struck down when they are the
product of disloyal action (
Edelman v. Fruehauf Corp.,
798 F.2d 882 (6th
Cir.1986)), or, conceivably, if they are
the product of a grossly negligent process.
Hanson Trust PLC v. ML SCM Acquisition,
Inc.,
781 F.2d 264 (2d Cir.1986). But
if, as appears to be the case here, such a
provision is negotiated in good faith by a
board with no apparent conflict, that is
well-advised and follows a responsible,
deliberate procedure, I am at a loss as to
know what basis exists for declaring such a
provision a violation of shareholders'
rights. The only colorable argument offered
(other than the factual argument that the
Special Committee was operating in bad
faith) is that, where an auction for the
Company is on-going, the board has a
duty--not to exercise its judgment as to
what is in the shareholders' interest with
respect to a proposal made to it--but to
steadfastly refuse to agree to such a
provision, since to do so will create an
impediment of some size to other bidders.
To create such an impediment is
offensive to the level playing field
metaphor but to what principle of law does
it necessarily give offense? Assuming a
properly motivated, independent board acting
deliberately, in my opinion, it gives
offense to no
Page 784 right of shareholders. In Revlon, this court
did restrain the implementation of a
break-up fee provisions as did the Sixth
Circuit Court of Appeals in Fruehauf. But in
each of those instances, the courts
concluded that the board was not properly
motivated, that in each case, the board
sought not to exercise judgment for the
shareholders' benefit but to exercise power
for the benefit of others. See Revlon at
182-184; Fruehauf, 798 F.2d at 885. As I
cannot conclude that the Special Committee
has not been properly motivated here (or
that it acted on an uninformed basis, cf.,
Hanson Trust PLC v. ML SCM Acquisition,
Inc., 781 F.2d 264, 277 (2d Cir.1986)),
I cannot conclude that its judgment to agree
to the inclusion of the $17 termination fee
in the context of the March 13th contract or
the later amended merger agreement, as
curious as I find it to be, at least in the
March 13th setting (see p. 779, supra ), was
a wrong to shareholders.
VII.
With respect to the claim that
Stevens' insistence upon the particular form
of standstill agreement before disclosing
non-public information itself constituted a
form of preference for Odyssey that was
improperly motivated and a wrong in the
light of Revlon, I can find no reasonable
probability of success at this time. First,
the non-public documents were offered to all
bidders on the same terms. There is no
sufficient basis in the record developed to
date to believe that there was an
undisclosed agreement or arrangement with
Odyssey to assure to it different treatment
under that agreement than West Point could
expect. Second, after admittedly only a
preliminary view of the terms of the
standstill agreement, I am not inclined to
agree with the broad interpretation that
West Point would accord that document. I am,
therefore, unimpressed with the argument
that West Point was, in effect, forced
unfairly to conduct its campaign without
data that others had access to. In all
events, I find no sufficient basis to
conclude at this time that the Special
Committee utilized the standstill agreement
for an inequitable purpose--such as the
favoring of Odyssey despite the interests of
shareholders--and thus find no basis for
equitable relief from the consequences of
West Point's refusal to agree to its terms.
VIII.
I turn then to a remaining claim
not previously adverted to: that Stevens has
breached a state law duty by distributing to
its shareholders a Schedule 14D-9 filing
that was not true and complete. A Schedule
14D-9 is filed pursuant to the Federal
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Two forms
of relief are requested with respect to this
claim: corrective disclosure and an
injunction against Odyssey's closing its
tender offer until the corrective disclosure
is made--this latter relief on the theory
that Odyssey is a co-conspirator or aider
and abettor of Stevens' 14D-9 based state
law violation.
These points were not mentioned
at oral argument, but I assume that, having
been made in the briefs, West Point wishes
to press them. I have reviewed the claimed
non-disclosures--and assuming for these
purposes that a legal duty of the kind
posited exists--my initial reaction (and the
time available permits little else) is that
they do not present major difficulties when
viewed in the light of the appropriate legal
test. See Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co.,
Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 929 (1985). But I do not
place my decision upon that basis, but
rather upon other elements of the
preliminary injunction test.
Specifically, it follows from the
conclusion that the Special Committee has
not been shown to have acted in bad faith
(or more precisely, that it has not been
shown to be likely that at final hearing
such a determination will be made) that
Odyssey has not been shown to have conspired
with the Special Committee. I see,
therefore, no basis to enjoin Odyssey from
exercising its rights under its tender offer
documents.
Moreover, the rights of tendering
Stevens shareholders must be taken into
account when the request is to enjoin the
closing of a tender offer. See Freedman v.
Restaurant Associates Industries,
Page 785 Del.Ch. [current] Fed.Sec.L.Rep. (CCH) p
93,502 (October 16, 1987); Hecco Ventures v.
Sea-Land Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8486,
Jacobs, V.C. (May 19, 1986). There are
reasons that would suggest to a rational
shareholder that the Odyssey offer is
preferred--it is higher at this point and,
if the Special Committee's counsel is
correct, more likely to close and sooner.
Thus, enjoining Odyssey's offer would
threaten possible injury to Stevens
shareholders and that fact would bear
importantly upon the propriety of issuing an
injunction of the kind sought.
* * *
The remedy for West Point, if
there is to be one, will, so far as this
court is involved at least, be afforded by
the market. It has time to make an offer
that is better than Odyssey's current offer.
West Point's invitation to this court to
facilitate a higher offer by striking down
the provisions negotiated by the Special
Committee will be declined, even though to
act on that suggestion would financially
benefit shareholders. While the court is
protective of shareholder rights,
shareholders possess no right in equity to
rescind a valid corporate agreement simply
because to do so would redound to their
financial benefit. Concluding on the limited
record available that the agreements in
question appear to be the product of valid
board action, I see no justification for
relieving the shareholders of their
consequences now.
The pending application will be
denied. IT IS SO ORDERED.
1 There will be no further reference to
the stockholder action, as the arguments
made by the class plaintiffs tend to
parallel those of West Point.
2 Odyssey had a "highly confident" letter
from Drexel Burnham, the famous junk-bond
innovator, who, it is claimed, has never
disappointed the recipient of such a letter.
In all events, Goldman, Sachs advised the
Special Committee that "it viewed Odyssey's
financing as being firmly committed." Conway
Aff. p 21. On April 5th, Odyssey announced
that such financing was now in place.
3 See Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805 (1984) and Arsht, Fiduciary
Responsibilities of Directors, 4
Del.J.Corp.L., 652, 659 (1979), with respect
to the requirement that a conscious decision
to act or to refrain from action is a
necessary factor for the invocation of the
doctrine.
4 As to the appropriate standard of care,
see Aronson v. Lewis, supra.
5 This "escape hatch" language has been
variously stated in the Delaware opinions:
"egregious" decisions are said to be beyond
the protections of the business judgment
rule, ( Aronson v. Lewis, supra at 805), as
are decisions that cannot "be attributed to
any rational business purpose" (Sinclair Oil
Corp. v. Levien, Del.Supr., 280 A.2d 717,
720 (1971)), or decisions that constitute "a
gross abuse of discretion" (Warshaw v.
Calhoun, Del.Supr.,
221 A.2d 487 (1966)).
See also Kaplan v. Goldsamt, Del.Ch., 380
A.2d 556, 567 (1977); Gimbel v. The Signal
Companies, Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 599, 610 (1974)
("... inadequacy ... so gross as to display
itself as a badge of fraud"); Marks v.
Wolfson, Del.Ch., 188 A.2d 680, 685 (1963)
("... price ... for the sale of ... assets
was so clearly inadequate as constructively
to carry the badge of fraud").
6 That, of course, does not mean that
material factors other than "price" ought
not to be considered and, where appropriate,
acted upon by the board. Such consideration
might include form of consideration, timing
of the transaction or risk of
non-consummation. Thus, although it hardly
needs to be said, the Special Committee was
entirely justified in considering any
legitimate threat that the antitrust laws
posed to the consummation of any West Point
proposal.
7 To sign up with West Point at $64 would
not have left the Special Committee in an
analogous position vis-a-vis Odyssey, since
it had not indicated a willingness to go to
$64 yet.
8 West Point's point that a provision of
this kind is either invalid or particularly
suspect when it is given to an existing
bidder because such a bidder (presumably in
fact? perhaps as a matter of law?) does not
need to be encouraged to participate in the
bidding process, is faulty as a matter of
logic. If an existing bidder will not
participate further in bidding without some
special consideration, and it is in the
shareholders' interest to keep that bidder
participating, it hardly matters that the
consideration is flowing to one who had
previously been involved and, but for the
consideration, would not be involved
further. In all events, without the
inducement, the shareholders are left
without a bidder and perhaps no auction, or
at least a reduced likelihood of a continued
auction.
9 See cases and text at note 5, supra. |