| Page 348 546 A.2d 348
57 USLW 2178 Larry KRAMER, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
WESTERN PACIFIC INDUSTRIES, INC., Howard A.
Newman and
William C. Scott, Defendants Below,
Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: March 29, 1988.
Decided: Aug. 22, 1988. Sidney B. Silverman (argued), Pro
Hac Vice, and Harold B. Obstfeld, of
counsel, of Silverman and Harnes, New York,
and Pamela S. Tikellis of Greenfield &
Chimicles, Wilmington, for appellant.
David A. Drexler (argued) and
Kenneth J. Nachbar of Morris, Nichols, Arsht
& Tunnell, Wilmington, for appellees.
Page 349
Before HORSEY, MOORE and WALSH,
JJ.
HORSEY, Justice:
In this corporate matter we
consider once again the consequences of a
cash-out merger upon the standing of a
shareholder to pursue a claim of wrongdoing
against management. Plaintiff, Larry Kramer,
owner of 200 shares of common stock of
defendant, Western Pacific Industries,
Incorporated ("Western Pacific"), prior to a
merger of Western Pacific into Danaher
Corporation ("Danaher"), appeals the Court
of Chancery's dismissal of his pre-merger
suit for loss of standing and the Court's
grant of summary judgment for Western
Pacific. Kramer v. Western Pacific Ind.,
Inc., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8675, Hartnett, V.C.
(Sept. 11, 1987).
In 1986, following a "bidding
war," Danaher acquired Western Pacific
pursuant to a tender offer followed by a
cash-out merger at a price of $163.00 per
share. Prior to the merger's consummation,
Kramer filed suit against Western Pacific
and the individual defendants, charging that
the defendants, in connection with the
merger, diverted funds to the individual
defendants in the form of stock options and
termination agreements and to third parties
in the form of excessive fees and expense
payments relating to the merger.
The Court of Chancery ruled that
this Court's decision in Lewis v. Anderson,
Del.Supr.,
477 A.2d 1040 (1984), required
dismissal of Kramer's suit for loss of
standing to continue to pursue claims which
it found to be derivative rather than
individual. Kramer seeks reversal, asserting
that the merger did not deprive the Western
Pacific shareholders of standing because the
amended complaint should be construed as
directly attacking the fairness of the
merger terms as well as alleging wrongs
affecting the individual contractual rights
of the Western Pacific shareholders rather
than wrongs to the corporation.
Finding Lewis v. Anderson to be
controlling, we affirm the Court of
Chancery's grant of summary judgment for
Western Pacific. We construe the claims
stated in Kramer's amended complaint to be
essentially derivative in nature and not to
come within either of Lewis' two exceptions.
Hence, Kramer, having ceased to be a
shareholder of Western Pacific, lacks
standing to pursue the derivative claims
asserted by his amended complaint.
I
In June 1985, Western Pacific's
board of directors, acting through its ten
non-management directors, adopted without
dissent certain stock options which Kramer
challenges as excessive. Individual
defendants, Howard A. Newman and William C.
Scott, Western Pacific's Chairman and
President, respectively, the grantees of the
stock options, did not participate in the
portion of the board meeting at which the
options were discussed. Issuance of the
stock options was conditioned upon
shareholder approval, but to avoid the
expense of convening a special shareholder
meeting management placed consideration of
the stock options on the agenda for the 1986
annual meeting. In March 1986, the board
issued a proxy statement, soliciting
shareholder approval of the stock options,
and Western Pacific's shareholders approved
the stock options on May 6, 1986.
One month earlier, Western
Pacific's accountant informed Scott that
Edward Trump, on behalf of the Trump Group,
was interested in acquiring Western Pacific.
Newman delegated Scott to explore the matter
with Trump. Although Scott and Trump met for
the first time on the day of the annual
meeting, the shareholders were not informed
at the annual meeting of Trump's interest in
acquiring Western Pacific. Scott again met
with Trump on May 19, and on May 21, 1986,
both Scott and Newman met with Trump.
By mid-June 1986, the Trump
group, after making further investigations
decided it was not interested in acquiring
Western Pacific. In the words of Edward
Trump, the decision not to proceed "wasn't a
question of the few dollars. It [Western
Pacific] was not a business that we wanted
to own."
Page 350
On June 23, 1986, Chairman Newman
informed Western Pacific's board that even
though the negotiations with the Trump Group
had terminated, the investment community was
now aware that Western Pacific was "for
sale." Newman recommended, and the board
authorized, the investment banking firm of
Bear Stearns & Company ("Bear Stearns") to
search for a suitable buyer. At the same
meeting, the Compensation Committee (acting
through two nonemployee directors)
recommended that the Company enter into
termination agreements ("golden parachutes")
with two principal executives, Chairman
Newman and President Scott. The Committee's
recorded reason for doing so was to protect
management in the event of a change of
control and to ensure that management would
be in a position to respond to acquisition
proposals that were in the best interest of
the shareholders. Thereupon Western
Pacific's board, with Messrs. Scott and
Newman not participating in the vote,
unanimously approved the golden parachutes
for Newman and Scott.
In either August or September,
1986, Bear Stearns produced a second buyer
for Western Pacific, Gibbons, Green, Van
Amerongen ("Gibbons, Green").
1
Gibbons, Green offered to buy Western
Pacific for a price of $155.00 per share.
Western Pacific's board reviewed the
Gibbons, Green offer, obtained a favorable
fairness opinion from Bear Stearns (acting
as Western Pacific's independent financial
advisor) and approved the offer. On
September 17, 1986, Western Pacific and
Gibbons, Green entered into an agreement for
the acquisition of Western Pacific at a
price of $155.00 per share, and the parties
issued a press release. The announcement of
the agreement precipitated a "bidding war"
for Western Pacific involving several new
contenders, including Danaher. The bidding
ended on October 3, 1986, when Danaher and
the board agreed upon Western Pacific's
acquisition pursuant to a tender offer for
the previously mentioned tender offer price
of $163.00 per share followed by a cash-out
merger at the same price.
On October 9, 1986, Western
Pacific and a wholly-owned subsidiary of
Danaher commenced a joint $163.00 per share
cash tender offer for all of Western
Pacific's stock, to be followed by a
cash-out merger at the same price. As a
consequence of the response to the tender
offer, Danaher became the owner of more than
90% of the stock of Western Pacific.
On October 10, 1986, Kramer filed
this suit, styled as a class action. Kramer
alleges that he is suing both individually
and representatively on behalf of the common
stockholders of Western Pacific. Kramer's
complaint, as amended, charges defendants
Newman and Scott with breach of their
fiduciary duty to Western Pacific.
Defendants' breach of duty is cast in terms
of claims of waste of corporate assets. The
two defendants alone, of a board comprised
of at least twelve directors, are charged
with diverting to themselves eleven million
dollars of the Danaher sale proceeds through
their receipt of stock options and golden
parachutes and with incurring eighteen
million dollars of excessive or unnecessary
fees and expenses in connection with the
sale of Western Pacific.
2
On December 31, 1986, pursuant to
8 Del.C. § 253, the merger was consummated.
As a result, by operation of law, Kramer and
the remaining Western Pacific stockholders
who had not tendered their
Page 351 shares ceased to be shareholders in exchange
for the right to receive $163.00 per share
in cash, subject to a right of appraisal
under 8 Del.C. § 262.
On January 14, 1987, defendants
moved to dismiss Kramer's amended complaint.
Defendants asserted that as a consequence of
the consummated merger, Kramer ceased to be
a shareholder of Western Pacific and lost
standing to maintain this action under the
principles enunciated in Lewis v. Anderson,
Del.Supr.,
477 A.2d 1040 (1984). On
September 11, 1987, the Court of Chancery
granted defendants' motion, treating it as
one for summary judgment. The Court stated,
"Well-settled Delaware case law clearly
indicates that, as a result of the cash-out
merger and plaintiff's failure to challenge
the fairness of the underlying merger
itself, the plaintiff is without standing to
pursue his ... stockholder derivative
claims."
On appeal Kramer contends that
the Court of Chancery erred as a matter of
law in misinterpreting both the amended
complaint and the controlling law. Kramer
makes two contentions in this appeal: (a)
Kramer asserts that the amended complaint
alleges wrongs against the contractual
rights of the individual shareholders rather
than wrongs against the corporate entity;
and, alternatively, (b) Kramer argues that
the amended complaint's charges against
management of acts of waste associated with
the sale of the company are tantamount to
direct attacks upon the fairness of the
merger terms. Hence, Kramer maintains that
the cashed-out shareholders of Western
Pacific have standing to pursue their claims
in individual or class suits, and that the
Trial Court erred in ruling to the contrary.
We cannot agree.
II
A. Nature of Claims Stated
The distinction between
derivative and individual actions rests upon
the party being directly injured by the
alleged wrongdoing.
The common law countries have devised one
of the most interesting and ingenious of
accountability mechanisms for large formal
organizations: the shareholder's derivative
suit. In such a suit, the shareholder sues
on behalf of the corporation for harm done
to it. Ordinarily, therefore, any damages
recovered in the suit are paid to the
corporation. Historically, the derivative
suit was conceived of as a double suit, or
two suits in one: The plaintiff (1) brought
a suit in equity against the corporation
seeking an order compelling it (2) to bring
a suit for damages or other relief against
some third person who had caused legal
injury to the corporation. Shareholders may
also bring direct actions, both as
individuals and as a class, for injuries
done to them in their individual capacities
by corporate fiduciaries. Recovery, in these
individual or class actions goes to the
suing shareholders, not their corporation.
R. Clark, Corporate Law 639-40
(1986) (emphasis added); see also D. Block,
N. Barton & S. Radin, The Business Judgment
Rule: Fiduciary Duties of Corporate
Directors and Officers at 216 (1987). Thus,
to have standing to sue individually, rather
than derivatively on behalf of the
corporation, the plaintiff must allege more
than an injury resulting from a wrong to the
corporation. See Moran v. Household
International, Inc., Del.Ch., 490 A.2d 1059,
1070, aff'd, Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985)
("[t]o set out an individual action, the
plaintiff must allege either 'an injury
which is separate and distinct from that
suffered by other shareholders,' or a wrong
involving a contractual right of a
shareholder ... which exists independently
of any right of the corporation") (quoting
Fletcher's Cyclopedia Corps., § 5921, at 451
(Perm.Ed., Rev.Vol. 1984) (citations
omitted)). For a plaintiff to have standing
to bring an individual action, he must be
injured directly or independently of the
corporation. See Bokat v. Getty Oil Co.,
Del.Supr., 262 A.2d 246, 249 (1970).
Despite these clear theoretical
distinctions between derivative and
individual causes of action, "the line of
distinction between derivative suits and
those brought for the enforcement of
personal rights asserted on behalf of a
class of stockholders
Page 352 is often a narrow one...." Abelow v.
Symonds, Del.Ch., 156 A.2d 416, 420 (1959).
Whether a cause of action is individual or
derivative must be determined from the
"nature of the wrong alleged" and the
relief, if any, which could result if
plaintiff were to prevail. See Elster v.
American Airlines, Inc., Del.Ch.,
100 A.2d 219, 221-23 (1953).
3
In determining the nature of the wrong
alleged, a court must look to "the body of
the complaint, not to the plaintiff's
designation or stated intention." Lipton v.
News Int'l, PLC, Del.Supr., 514 A.2d 1075,
1078 (1986).
Kramer, seeking to avoid loss of
standing through merger, has designated his
suit as a class action stating individual
and not derivative claims. Kramer asserts
that the Trial Court misinterpreted the
causes of action stated against management
when it found them to be derivative claims,
thus passing upon the merger to Danaher
under Lewis. Kramer makes two arguments: (i)
that the causes of action pleaded, though
constituting claims for waste of assets
[$11,000,000 in stock options and
termination bonuses and $18,000,000 of
excessive fees], worked a "special " and
"direct " injury to the common shareholders'
contractual rights that is distinct from any
injury to the corporation; and (ii) that the
individual defendants' alleged breaches of
fiduciary duty directly and adversely
affected the merger consideration; hence,
the complaint should be construed as an
attack on the "fairness" of the terms of the
merger, which, being individual in nature
under Cede & Co. v. Technicolor Inc.
Del.Supr., 542 A.2d 1182 (1988), survives
the merger.
Kramer argues that the class
sustained an injury when it was "wrongfully
deprived" of a "portion of the Merger Sale
proceeds." Kramer reasons that since the
$29,000,000 unnecessarily spent by
management "could only come out of the Sale
Proceeds," the class of common shareholders
thereby sustained a special injury by the
reduction of the amount of their
distributive share.
4
However, in our view, the allegations of the
amended complaint do not sustain Kramer's
characterization of the complaint--that is,
as representing either allegedly wrongful
acts of management resulting in an injury to
the common shareholders that is separate and
distinct from that sustained by the
corporation as a whole or as a direct attack
on the fairness of the terms of the merger.
The claims alleged against
Messrs. Newman and Scott are claims of waste
of assets from conduct extending over a
period of six months or more that are
largely unrelated to the Danaher sale.
Moreover, the disputed corporate obligations
were incurred in response to a series or
sequence of events that plaintiff argues,
with hindsight, were entirely foreseeable
and predictable.
Page 353 Because the culminating event was the
Danaher going-private transaction, plaintiff
treats the six months of expenditures as if
incurred simultaneously and attributes them
to the ultimate buy-out by Danaher. So
construed, plaintiff contends that the
expenditures collectively represent a
special or direct injury to the common
shareholder of Western Pacific as
distinguished from an injury to the
corporation itself. In our view, plaintiff
strains for a result that a reasonable
construction of the amended complaint does
not support.
The complaint states simply a
series of claims of waste of assets (through
the payment of unnecessary options, bonuses,
fees and expenses) that, by virtue of the
timing of payout, are said to result in an
illegal diversion of funds from the
shareholders in breach of a contract right
and the cause of special injury to them.
5 We do not find
such allegations to be sufficient to state a
claim of special or direct injury to the
common shareholders rather than a derivative
claim for waste.
Suits against management for
waste resulting from excessive payments of
corporate funds (whether made to individual
defendants or to third parties) do not
affect contractual rights of shareholders
associated with the ownership of common
stock in the sense of altering the ratable
distribution of a going private sale.
6 The gravamen of
Kramer's complaint is mismanagement
resulting in waste of corporate assets and
treatment uniformly accorded such
allegations is well settled under Delaware
law.
Delaware courts have long
recognized that actions charging
"mismanagement which depress[ ] the value of
stock [allege] a wrong to the corporation;
i.e., the stockholders collectively, to be
enforced by a derivative action." Bokat, 262
A.2d at 249; see also Harff v. Kerkorian,
Del.Ch., 324 A.2d 215, 218 (1974), rev'd on
other grounds, Del.Supr.,
347 A.2d 133
(1975). Thus, where a plaintiff shareholder
claims that the value of his stock will
deteriorate and that the value of his
proportionate share of the stock will be
decreased as a result of alleged director
mismanagement, his cause of action is
derivative in nature. See Elster, 100 A.2d
at 222.
A claim of mismanagement
resulting in corporate waste, if proven,
represents a direct wrong to the corporation
that is indirectly experienced by all
shareholders. Any devaluation of stock is
shared collectively by all the shareholders,
rather than independently by the plaintiff
or any other individual shareholder. Thus,
the wrong alleged is entirely derivative in
nature.
B. Claim of Fraud In or Arising From a
Merger
Kramer alternatively seeks to
establish the existence of an individual
claim of waste by attacking the "terms" of
the merger. Kramer alleges that "defendants
Newman and Scott diverted to themselves and
others moneys rightfully belonging to the
Class, resulting in unfair treatment of the
Class."
7
Plaintiff's argument is premised
Page 354 upon Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 7129, Allen, C. (Jan. 13,
1987) ("Cede Ch."), rev'd in part on other
grounds, Del.Supr., 542 A.2d 1182 (1988)
("Cede Supr.").
In Cede Ch., the Court of
Chancery held that "cashed-out shareholders
who do not seek appraisal are, after the
effectuation of the merger, certainly not
stockholders, yet clearly such persons have
standing to litigate claims of breach of
duty arising from the merger." Cede Ch.,
slip. op. at 11-12 (citing Rabkin v. Philip
A. Hunt Chem. Co., Del.Supr.,
498 A.2d 1099
(1985); Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co.,
Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 929 (1985); Weinberger
v. UOP Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983);
Lynch v. Vickers, Del.Supr.,
429 A.2d 497
(1981)). Cede Ch., and the cases cited
therein, are distinguishable. In contrast to
the instant case, the cited decisions
concerned direct attacks on transactions
involving corporate restructuring. As
recognized by this Court in Cede Supr.,
direct attacks against a given corporate
transaction (attacks involving fair dealing
or fair price) give complaining shareholders
standing to pursue individual actions even
after they are cashed-out through the
effectuation of a merger. Specifically, this
Court stated that "[n]o one would assert
that a former owner suing for loss of
property through deception or fraud has lost
standing to right the wrong that arguably
caused the owner to relinquish ownership or
possession of the property." Cede Supr., 542
A.2d at 1188.
In this case, the focus of
Kramer's attack is upon waste through
allegedly excessive payments to Newman,
Scott, (and unnamed others) incurred prior
to the Danaher merger. Newman and Scott's
alleged breaches of duty do not implicate
the fairness of the merger's terms.
Plaintiff does not directly challenge the
merger as resulting from a breach of
fiduciary duty. See, e.g., Penn Mart Realty
Co. v. Penelman, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8349,
Hartnett, V.C. (Apr. 15, 1987); Rosen v.
Navarre, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 7098, Hartnett,
V.C. (Oct. 29, 1985). Having not directly
attacked the merger, Kramer's claim of
diversion of funds and excessive payments
clearly does not rise to an attack on the
merger itself sufficient for his suit to
survive the merger.
Kramer's position is tantamount
to saying that, in the context of a cash-out
merger, whenever a shareholder asserts a
claim against management for breach of
fiduciary duty based upon waste or other
acts causing a monetary loss to the
corporation, the shareholder's claim should
also be construed: (i) as asserting a
"special injury" to the shareholder, as
distinct from the corporation; and (ii) as
amounting to a direct attack on the terms of
the merger, thus giving the shareholder
standing to continue, or bring forward, a
suit after merger. Such a position is
contrary to well-established principles of
Delaware law and cannot be accepted by this
Court.
C. Shareholder Standing to Continue A
Post-Merger Derivative Suit
Having found Kramer's claims to
be clearly derivative in nature, we turn to
the issue of standing. To have standing to
maintain a shareholder derivative suit, a
plaintiff must be a shareholder at the time
of the filing of the suit and must remain a
shareholder throughout the litigation. See
Lewis v. Anderson, Del.Supr.,
477 A.2d 1040
(1984). This Court, in Lewis, set forth two
exceptions in the merger context to its
holding that only a current shareholder has
standing to maintain an action that is
derivative in nature: (i) if the merger
itself is the subject of a claim of fraud,
being perpetrated merely to deprive
shareholders of the standing to bring a
derivative action; or (ii) if the merger is
in reality merely a reorganization which
does not affect plaintiff's ownership in the
business enterprise. 477 A.2d at 1046 n. 10;
see also Bokat v. Getty Oil Co., Del.Supr., 262 A.2d 246, 249 (1970); Schreiber v.
Carney, Del.Ch., 447 A.2d 17, 21-22 (1982).
Both exceptions set forth in
Lewis are clearly inapplicable to this case.
Kramer does not contend that the merger was
fraudulent, perpetrated merely to deprive
Western Pacific of its claim against the
Page 355 defendants; nor does plaintiff assert that
Western Pacific has simply been through a
reorganization not affecting plaintiff's
ownership. Having found the claims asserted
by Kramer to be derivative in nature and
that Kramer has failed to assert a claim
that falls within an exception established
in Lewis, plaintiff has lost standing to
pursue the post-merger claims against the
defendants.
Conclusion
Since plaintiff's claims against
the individual defendants are for waste of
corporate assets, they are wholly derivative
in nature. The amended complaint may not be
reasonably construed as alleging a "special
injury" suffered by Kramer or his purported
class that is different from the indirect
injury suffered by all the shareholders of
Western Pacific. Kramer also fails to assert
a claim of fraud in the merger or to bring
his claims within one of the exceptions
recognized in Lewis. Thus, it necessarily
follows that plaintiff has lost standing to
pursue the derivative claims stated. Title
to such claims has passed by operation of
law to Danaher, and Danaher alone has the
right to determine whether to pursue such
claims against the defendants.
* * *
* * *
Accordingly, the decision of the
Court of Chancery is Affirmed.
1 The plaintiff and defendants do not
agree as to when Bear Stearns produced
Gibbons, Green as a second buyer for Western
Pacific. Plaintiff states that Gibbons,
Green's interest was revealed in
mid-September 1986. Defendants assert that
Gibbons, Green came forward in August 1986.
While the date is disputed, we find it
irrelevant to the disposition of the appeal.
2 Kramer does not dispute the adequacy of
the tender offer/merger price. He agrees
that the tender offer and merger resulted
from a competitive bidding contest and the
efforts of Bear, Stearns. He also concedes
that Newman and Scott, given their large
stock holdings, would have no reason not to
obtain the highest possible price for
Western Pacific. His principal contention
for sustaining an individual, as
distinguished from a derivative, claim is
that the effect of the defendants' acts of
waste was to reduce the common shareholders'
net distributive share of an otherwise
adequate tender offer price paid by Danaher
for taking Western Pacific private.
3 The line between derivative and
individual actions can become particularly
vague in the area of suits challenging
defensive takeover tactics. Fortunately, the
issues raised in this case do not involve
the area of defensive tactics. Although some
may view "golden parachutes" as a defensive
measure, others view this method of
compensation as more a form of insurance for
managers. See R. Clark, Corporate Law at 577
(1987). Moreover, some commentators have
argued that golden parachutes actually
benefit shareholders because they reduce the
personal incentive of target managers to
systematically reject takeover bids. See
Lambert & Larcker, Golden Parachutes,
Executive Decision Making, and Shareholder
Wealth, 7 J. Acc. & Econ. 179 (1985)
(empirical study that purports to show a
positive security market reaction to the
adoption of golden parachute plans); see
also Note, Golden Parachutes and the
Business Judgment Rule: Toward a Proper
Standard of Review, 94 Yale L.J. 909 (1985).
4 In Kramer's view of the facts,
management's grant of $11 million in stock
options and golden parachutes and $18
million in "excessive" expenditures
associated with the sale of the company
occurred so close in time to the merger's
consummation as to cause a direct injury and
loss to the common shareholders in the form
of a reduced distribution. Kramer, however,
misreads the record. The stock options
received by Newman and Scott were approved
by the Western Pacific directors in June
1985 and ratified by the Western Pacific
shareholders in May 1986. The allegedly
excessive fees arose, in part, out of the
Gibbons, Green agreement in September 1986.
The Western Pacific-Danaher merger was not
proposed until late September 1986, after
the adoption of all the transactions Kramer
presently contests. Kramer's argument
implies a conspiracy on the part of the
defendants to divert the sale proceeds from
the shareholders to the individual
defendants and third parties. Such a
contention is neither alleged nor supported
by the record.
5 If Newman and Scott exercise their
stock options, all common stock shareholders
will still ratably participate in the
distribution of the sale proceeds because
the shares Newman and Scott will receive
will be equal to all other shares. The
golden parachutes reflect compensation
resulting from the termination of Newman and
Scott's executive positions, a transaction
unrelated to their position as shareholders.
6 It is interesting to note that, outside
the area of going-private transactions, all
the claims asserted by the plaintiff have
consistently been viewed by our courts as
derivative in nature. See, e.g., Bokat, 262
A.2d at 248-49 (a claim that a majority
shareholder caused the corporation to pay
excessive fees for the majority's benefit,
rather than for proper corporate purpose,
held derivative); Elster, 100 A.2d at 222 (a
claim challenging the grant of stock options
held derivative); Penn Mart Realty Co. v.
Perelman, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8349, Hartnett,
V.C. (Apr. 15, 1987) (a claim challenging
termination payments held to be derivative
in nature).
7 In paragraph 4 of the amended
complaint, Kramer alleges that "the per
share consideration to be paid to the Class
would have been substantially greater if the
defendants had not violated their fiduciary
duty to the Class of candor, loyalty and due
care." In paragraph 5 of the amended
complaint, plaintiff asserts that
"defendants Newman and Scott diverted money
to themselves which rightfully belonged to
the Class." However, these assertions do not
represent an attack on the merger directly,
either fair price or fair dealing, but
rather an attack on transactions that arise
out of the merger. |