| Page 963 547 A.2d 963
12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1156
Frieda H. RABKIN, Harry Lewis, Eric
Emory, Alan Emory, Nancy
Emory, Howard Greenwald, Werner Klugman and
Samuel
Kaufman, Plaintiffs,
v.
PHILIP A. HUNT CHEMICAL CORPORATION, Olin
Corporation, Olin
Acquisition Corporation, Alfred T.
Blomquist, Richard R.
Berry, John W. Johnstone, Jr., Robert T.
Zetena, John M.
Henske, John R. Bonniwell, Charles J. Lause,
Stephen R.
Petschek and George J. Haufler, Defendants.
Civ. A. No. 7547. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: July 10, 1986.
Decided: Dec. 4, 1986.
Page 964
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1159] Joseph
A. Rosenthal and Norman M. Monhait of Morris
and Rosenthal, P.A., Wilmington, Wolf,
Popper, Ross, Wolf & Jones, Garwin, Bronzaft
& Gerstein, Lowey, Dannenberg & Knapp, P.C.,
and Tenzer, Greenblatt, Fallon & Kaplan, New
York City, for plaintiffs.
R. Franklin Balotti and C.
Stephen Bigler of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington and Cravath, [12 Del. J. Corp. L.
1160] Swaine & Moore, New York City, for
defendants Olin Corp., Olin Acquisition
Corp., Philip A. Hunt Chemical Corp., John
M. Henske, Richard R. Berry and John W.
Johnstone, Jr.
Michael Hanrahan of Prickett,
Jones, Elliot, Kristol & Schnee, Wilmington
and Shea & Gould, New York City, for
defendants John R. Bonniwell, Charles J.
Lause, Stephen R. Petschek and George J.
Haufler.
Martin P. Tully of Morris,
Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, for
defendants Alfred T. Blomquist and Robert T.
Zetena.
OPINION
BERGER, Vice Chancellor.
This is an action brought by the
former minority stockholders of Philip A.
Hunt Chemical Corporation ("Hunt")
challenging the cash out merger of Hunt with
its majority stockholder, Olin Corporation
("Olin"). The original complaint named as
defendants Hunt, Olin and certain of Hunt's
directors. Shortly after this action was
filed, plaintiffs moved for a preliminary
injunction and for leave to file a
supplemental and amended complaint.
Defendants moved to dismiss on various
grounds.
Plaintiffs' motions were denied
and defendants' motions were granted on the
ground that appraisal was plaintiffs'
exclusive remedy.
Rabkin v. Philip A. Hunt Chemical Corp.,
Del. Ch., 480 A.2d 655 (1984). The
Delaware Supreme Court reversed and remanded
with instructions that plaintiffs be allowed
to file an amended and supplemental
complaint. See Rabkin v. Philip A. Hunt
Chemical Corp., Del.Supr.,
498 A.2d 1099
(1985). Thereafter, plaintiffs filed a
Consolidated Amended and Supplemental Class
Action Complaint (the "Complaint") that,
among other things, added as defendants Olin
Acquisition Corporation ("Olin Acquisition")
and Richard R. Berry ("Berry") and John W.
Johnstone, Jr. ("Johnstone"), both Executive
Page 965 Vice Presidents of Olin and directors of
Hunt. This is the decision, after briefing
and argument, on defendants' new or renewed
motions to dismiss.
Generally, the Complaint alleges
the following facts about the contested
transaction. Prior to March 1, 1983, Turner
& Newall, Inc. ("Turner & Newall") owned
approximately 63% of Hunt's common stock. On
December 27, 1982, Olin and Turner & Newall
entered into a stock purchase agreement
whereby Olin acquired [12 Del. J. Corp. L.
1161] Turner & Newall's controlling block of
Hunt stock for $25 per share. At Turner &
Newall's insistence, the stock purchase
agreement required Olin to pay $25 per share
if, during the one year commencing March 1,
1983, Olin or an affiliate acquired all or
substantially all of the remaining
outstanding shares of Hunt (the "price
commitment").
Olin disclosed the price
commitment both in a press release issued at
the time the stock purchase agreement was
executed and in a Schedule 13D filed with
the Securities and Exchange Commission
shortly thereafter. The Schedule 13D stated
that any acquisition made after the
expiration of the one year price commitment
might be at a price greater or less than $25
per share, "depending upon developments with
respect to the business of the Company and
general economic and other conditions" (the
"Schedule 13D commitment"). (p 21 quoting
the Schedule 13D).
A confidential memorandum
prepared by Olin's management (the
"Berardino memorandum") allegedly
demonstrates that Olin had decided to
acquire the minority interest in Hunt long
before the expiration of the one year price
commitment. However, Olin purposely waited
until three weeks after its expiration to
propose the merger at $20 per share.
I.
Olin bases its motion on lack of
personal jurisdiction. It is a Virginia
corporation with its principal place of
business in Stamford, Connecticut. Although
not alleged in the Complaint, since 1952
Olin has been registered as a foreign
corporation qualified to do business in
Delaware and has appointed an agent for
service of process pursuant to 8 Del.C. §
371. Notwithstanding its registration as a
foreign corporation, Olin argues that it
does not have the constitutionally mandated
minimum contacts necessary to be subjected
to in personam jurisdiction.
International Shoe Co. v. Washington, 326
U.S. 310, 66 S.Ct. 154, 90 L.Ed. 95 (1945).
From the record, Olin's jurisdictional
contacts with Delaware, in addition to its
registration as a foreign corporation, are:
(1) it created a subsidiary Delaware
corporation (Olin Acquisition) for the
purpose of implementing the merger with
Hunt; (2) Olin currently has a total of
$5,933 invested in assets in Delaware; (3)
the Delaware telephone directory has a
listing for "Olin Water Services" with an
address and telephone number in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and (4) Olin
caused a certificate of merger to be filed
in Delaware giving effect to the transaction
at issue.
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1162] A
two-step analysis must be applied to
determine in personam jurisdiction. First,
the Court must decide whether Delaware law
provides a basis for the assertion of
jurisdiction. If so, it must determine
whether subjecting Olin to jurisdiction in
Delaware would be consistent with the due
process guarantees of the Fourteenth
Amendment. See La Nuova D & B S.p.A. v. Bowe
Co., Inc., Del.Supr., 513 A.2d 764 (1986).
Olin does not appear to question the
Delaware law component of this analysis.
Pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 371, Olin designated
a registered agent within Delaware and,
pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 376, the designated
registered agent may be served with all
process issued out of any court of this
state.
Turning to the constitutional
question, Olin must "have certain minimum
contacts with [the forum] such that the
maintenance of the suit does not offend
'traditional notions of fair play and
substantial justice.' " International Shoe
Co. v. Washington, supra at 316, quoting
Milliken v. Meyer, 311 U.S. 457, 463, 61
S.Ct. 339, 343, 85 L.Ed. 278 (1940). In
deciding whether such minimum contacts
exist, the Court must
Page 966 consider the relationship between the
defendants, the litigation and the forum,
Shaffer v. Heitner, 433 U.S. 186, 97 S.Ct.
2569, 53 L.Ed.2d 683 (1977), to
determine whether the " 'quality and nature'
of the defendant's activity is such that it
is 'reasonable' and 'fair' to require him to
conduct his defense in [Delaware]."
Kulko v. Superior Court of California, 436
U.S. 84, 92, 98 S.Ct. 1690, 1697, 56 L.Ed.2d
132 (1978). These constitutional
standards are satisfied if Olin has
"purposely avail[ed] itself of the privilege
of conducting activities within [Delaware],
thus invoking the benefits and protection of
its laws."
Hanson v. Denckla, 357 U.S. 235, 253, 78
S.Ct. 1228, 1239, 2 L.Ed.2d 1283 (1958).
Applying these standards, I find
that Olin has the requisite minimum contacts
with Delaware. It may be true, as Olin
argues, that the mere registration to do
business in Delaware and appointment of an
agent for service of process would be
insufficient, standing alone, to confer
jurisdiction.
In Re Mid-Atlantic Toyota, 525 F.Supp. 1265,
modified, 541 F.Supp. 62 (D.Md.1981).
However, that is not Olin's only contact
with Delaware. Olin chose to incorporate a
Delaware subsidiary and, through that
subsidiary, avail itself of Delaware law to
effectuate the merger attacked in this
litigation.
In Papendick v. Bosch, Del.Supr.,
410 A.2d 148 (1979), cert. denied,
Bosch v. Papendick, 446 U.S. 909, 100 S.Ct.
1837, 64 L.Ed.2d 262 (1980), similar
conduct by a foreign corporate defendant was
held sufficient to confer jurisdiction. In
Papendick, plaintiff claimed to be entitled
to a finder's fee for having provided the
foreign defendant with the name of a company
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1163] that might be
interested in selling defendant a
substantial block of stock. Defendant did,
in fact, purchase the stock through a
Delaware subsidiary created as a vehicle for
the acquisition. The Supreme Court reasoned:
We do not believe that the
International Shoe "minimum contact" due
process standards were intended to deprive
Delaware courts of jurisdiction by
permitting an alien corporation to come into
this State to create a Delaware corporate
subsidiary for the purpose of implementing a
contract under the protection of and
pursuant to powers granted by the laws of
Delaware, and then be heard to say, in a
suit arising from the very contract which
the subsidiary was created to implement,
that the only contact between it and
Delaware was the "mere" ownership of stock
of the subsidiary.
* * *
* * *
...There is a controlling
distinction, for present purposes, between
the ownership of shares of stock acquired by
purchase or grant as in Shaffer, on the one
hand, and ownership arising from the
purposeful utilization of the benefits and
protections of the Delaware Corporation Law
in activities related to the underlying
cause of action, on the other hand.
[Defendant] purposefully availed itself of
the benefits and protections of the laws of
the State of Delaware for financial gain in
activities related to the cause of action.
Therein lies the "minimum contact"
sufficient to sustain the jurisdiction of
Delaware's courts over [defendant].
Id. at 152.
Olin attempts to distinguish
Papendick on the basis that plaintiffs here
are attempting to obtain in personam
jurisdiction pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 376
whereas the plaintiff in Papendick was
asserting jurisdiction under 10 Del.C. §
366--the sequestration statute. I do not
find this distinction significant. As the
Court noted in Papendick, the rule of
Shaffer requires that "all assertions of
state-court jurisdiction ... be evaluated
according to the standards set forth in
International Shoe at its progeny."
Shaffer v. Heitner, 433 U.S. at 212, 97
S.Ct. at 2584. Thus, the analysis
applied in Papendick is appropriate here
notwithstanding the differences in the
methods by which jurisdiction is acquired.
The cases cited by Olin in
support of its position, however, are
distinguishable. In Meeker v. Bryant, Del.
Ch., Civil Action No. 6245, [12 Del. J.
Corp. L. 1164] Hartnett, V.C. (May 12, 1981)
the foreign defendant acquired its
controlling interest in its Delaware
subsidiary through market purchases and did
not create
Page 967 the subsidiary to facilitate the contested
transaction. Rothchild International
Corporation v. Liggett Group, Inc., et al.,
Del. Ch., Civil Action No. 6239, Brown, V.C.
(July 14, 1981), likewise, is inapposite.
The court there determined that plaintiff
was unable to effect service on the foreign
defendant pursuant to 10 Del.C. § 3104 or 8
Del.C. § 382 because the requirements of
those statutes had not been met. Service on
the foreign corporation's Delaware
subsidiary also was found insufficient to
obtain jurisdiction over the foreign parent
because the subsidiary was not shown to be
the agent or alter ego of the parent. In
short, the issue of minimum contacts was not
before the Court.
1
In J. Royal Parker Associates, Inc. v.
Parco, Brown and Root, Inc., Del. Ch., Civil
Action No. 7013, Berger, V.C. (November 30,
1984), the analysis was limited to the
applicablity of Delaware's long arm statute
as opposed to due process standards.
Cropper v. Rego Distribution Center, Inc.,
461 F.Supp. 529 (D.Del.1978) (addressing
applicability of 8 Del.C. § 382). In sum, I
find that Olin has sufficient minimum
contacts with Delaware to sustain
jurisdiction and Olin's motion to dismiss is
denied.
II.
Olin Acquisition moved to dismiss
on the grounds that it was not amenable to
service or properly served and that the
Complaint fails to state a claim against it
in any event. As noted earlier, Olin
Acquisition was not one of the original
defendants in this action. Rather, it was
added more than a year after Olin
Acquisition was merged into Hunt and legally
ceased to exist. At oral argument,
plaintiffs' counsel acknowledged that
dismissal is appropriate. However, the
purported claim against Olin Acquisition
still must be analyzed to determine whether
there is a viable claim against Hunt, the
surviving corporation in the merger with
Olin Acquisition. Pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 259
and the terms of the merger agreement,
plaintiffs contend that Hunt assumes the
liabilities of Olin Acquisition. Thus, they
say, if the Complaint states a claim against
Olin Acquisition, it must be deemed to state
a claim against Hunt.
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1165] In
their brief, plaintiffs contend that
paragraphs 1, 4(b), 42 and 49(a) of the
Complaint adequately state a claim that Olin
Acquisition "knowingly facilitated" Olin's
breach of fiduciary duty to Hunt's public
stockholders. As a result, plaintiffs
maintain that Olin Acquisition is
secondarily liable for Olin's wrongs and
that Hunt assumed Olin Acquisition's
secondary liability.
After reviewing the cited
paragraphs of the Complaint (as well as
paragraph 11, mentioned by counsel for
plaintiffs at oral argument), I find that
the Complaint fails to state a claim against
Olin Acquisition. Paragraphs 1, 4(b), 11 and
42 set forth the terms of the contested
merger, certain of the parties'
relationships and the duties they allegedly
breached. Specifically, these paragraphs
allege that (1) the public minority
stockholders of Hunt were cashed out for $20
per share (p 1); (2) Olin Acquisition was a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Olin formed for
the sole purpose of acquiring Hunt (p 4(b));
(3) Olin, as Hunt's majority stockholder,
and all of the corporate defendants owed
fiduciary duties to Hunt's public
stockholders (p 11); and (4) Olin controlled
the outcome of the merger since the merger
agreement did not require approval by a
majority of the minority stockholders (p
42). Paragraph 49(a) of the Complaint
alleges that Olin and certain of the
individual defendants breached their
fiduciary duty by intentionally waiting
until the expiration of Olin's one year
price commitment before effectuating the
merger at $20 per share.
As Olin Acquisition correctly
points out, none of these allegations (or,
for that matter,
Page 968 any of the other allegations in the
Complaint) charge Olin Acquisition with any
wrongdoing. At oral argument, plaintiffs
explained their theory as follows: since
Olin allegedly breached its fiduciary duty
in connection with the merger and Olin
Acquisition was the corporate vehicle
through which the merger was consummated,
the subsidiary was a knowing participant
liable for its parent's breach.
In order to state a claim under
this theory, plaintiffs would have to
allege, "(1) the existence of a fiduciary
relationship, (2) a breach of the
fiduciary's duty, and (3) knowing
participation in that breach by [Olin
Acquisition]."
Penn Mart Realty Company v. Becker, Del.
Ch., 298 A.2d 349, 351 (1972). The
Complaint, however, contains no allegation
of Olin Acquisition's "knowing
participation" in Olin's breach of fiduciary
duty. Indeed, there is no allegation that
Olin Acquisition even existed at the time
the merger proposal was presented to Hunt.
Inasmuch as the Complaint fails
to state a claim against Olin Acquisition,
it follows that Hunt, also, must be
dismissed. There [12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1166]
are no allegations of wrongdoing against
Hunt and plaintiffs have acknowledged that
their claim against Hunt derives solely from
their purported claim against Olin
Acquisition.
III.
Messrs. Henske, Johnstone and
Berry, the Olin nominees on Hunt's board of
directors (the "Olin directors") moved to
dismiss on the ground that the only claim
directed to them is a derivative claim that
cannot be prosecuted by these plaintiffs.
The Olin directors are sued in their
capacity as directors of Hunt and are
charged with having breached their duty of
loyalty (1) by failing to inform Hunt of the
contents of the Berardino memorandum and (2)
by failing to inform Hunt that Olin had
considered paying more than $20 per share in
the merger. (Complaint, p 51).
The Berardino memorandum noted
that if Olin acquired the minority stock in
Hunt prior to March 1, 1984, it would be
contractually obligated to pay $25 per
share. However, by waiting until after the
expiration of the contractual price
commitment, Olin could save approximately
$7.3 million by paying $21.50 per share. The
Supreme Court stated that the Berardino
memorandum "raises unanswered questions
about the recognition by ... [the Olin
directors] of their undiminished duty of
loyalty to Hunt."
Rabkin v. Philip A. Hunt Chemical Corp., 498
A.2d at 1106 (emphasis added). Focusing
on this language, the Olin directors argue
that their breach, if any, was of a duty
owed to Hunt directly and to Hunt's
stockholders only derivatively. Since
plaintiffs are no longer stockholders of
Hunt, they may not pursue this derivative
claim on behalf of Hunt.
Schreiber v. Carney, Del. Ch.,
447 A.2d 17
(1982).
In analyzing whether the
Complaint states a derivative or
representative claim, the Court must look to
the nature of the alleged wrong rather than
the designation used by plaintiffs.
Moran v. Household International, Inc., Del.
Ch., 490 A.2d 1059, aff'd, Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985). In Elster v. American
Airlines, Inc., Del.Ch.,
100 A.2d 219
(1953), this Court held that an individual
action may be maintained if the stockholder
sustained a "special injury" and in Moran
the standard was articulated as follows:
To set out an individual action, the
plaintiff must allege either "an injury
which is separate and distinct from that
suffered by other shareholders," [citations
omitted] or a wrong involving a contractual
right of a shareholder, such [12 Del. J.
Corp. L. 1167] as the right to vote, or to
assert majority control, which exists
independently of any right of the
corporation.
Moran
v. Household International, Inc., 490 A.2d
at 1070. Most recently, the Delaware
Supreme Court explained:
In comparing the two-pronged test
of Moran with the definition of the term
"special injury" in Elster, it appears that
the term encompasses both prongs of the
Moran test. That is, a plaintiff alleges a
special injury and may maintain an
individual action if he complains of an
injury distinct from that suffered by other
shareholders or a wrong involving one of
Page 969 his contractual rights as a shareholder.
Moreover, while Moran serves as a quite
useful guide, the case should not be
construed as establishing the only test for
determining whether a claim is derivative or
individual in nature. Rather, as was
established in Elster, we must look
ultimately to whether the plaintiff has
alleged "special" injury, in whatever form.
Lipton and Ceasar v. News
International, P.L.C. v. Warner
Communications, Inc., et al., Del.Supr., 514
A.2d 1075, 1078, McNeilly, J. joined by
Horsey, J. (1986).
Plaintiffs' claim directly
attacks the Olin/Hunt merger as having
failed to satisfy the standard of entire
fairness required by Weinberger v. U.O.P.,
Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983). The
Complaint seeks rescission or damages for
the injuries allegedly suffered by the
minority stockholders. The majority
stockholder, Olin, certainly did not suffer
any such injury. It acquired the company
and, if plaintiffs' allegations are proven,
wrongfully benefited from the merger. Thus,
there can be no question but that plaintiffs
are claiming an injury that was not suffered
by all stockholders, but only by Hunt's
minority stockholders.
The Olin directors do not address
the injury suffered, relying instead on the
nature of the alleged wrong. They argue that
their fiduciary duties as Hunt directors ran
to Hunt directly and to its stockholders
indirectly, or derivatively.
Several courts have expressed the
general proposition that a breach of
fiduciary duty claim is derivative. See,
e.g., McAndrews and Forbes Holdings, Inc. v.
Revlon, Inc., Del.Ch., Civil Action No.
8126, Walsh, J. (October 9, 1985);
Gearheart Industries, Inc. v. Smith
International, Inc.,
741 F.2d 707 (5th
Cir.1984). However, in Revlon and
Gearheart, as with the other cases cited by
the Olin directors, [12 Del. J. Corp. L.
1168] the breach of fiduciary duty claim was
not a direct attack on a merger or other
similar transaction. As a result, the breach
of fiduciary duty (e.g., waste) injured the
corporation as a whole and all of its
stockholders on a pro rata basis. Here, by
contrast, the alleged wrong did not work an
injury either to Hunt or its majority
stockholder. Accordingly, following the
standard in News International, I find that
the Complaint states a direct or
representative claim against the Olin
directors. See also Balotti and Finkelstein,
The Delaware Law of Corporations and
Business Organizations § 13.6 ("[E]xamples
of claims giving rise to direct actions are:
... claims that a proposed merger,
recapitalization, redemption, or similar
transaction unfairly affects minority
shareholders....").
IV.
The six remaining Hunt
directors--Messrs. Blomquist, Zetena,
Bonniwell, Lause, Petschek and Haufler (the
"Hunt directors")--moved to dismiss for
failure to state a claim. They argue that
the allegations in the Complaint,
supplemented by certain facts set forth in
the proxy statement (which was incorporated
by reference in the Complaint), demonstrate
that they exercised informed business
judgment in responding to Olin's merger
proposal. Thus, they say that the Complaint
fails to state the only claim it purports to
allege--one for breach of the fiduciary duty
of care.
The Complaint recites the
relevant events as follows: (1) on March 28,
1984, after Olin and Hunt issued a joint
announcement of the proposed merger, the
Hunt board of directors met and appointed a
Special Committee of "outside" directors
2 (p 36, 37); (2)
on April 4, 1984, the Special Committee
retained an investment banking firm and a
law firm to assist in its duties (p 37); (3)
on May 10, 1984, counsel for plaintiffs met
with the Special Committee and explained the
basis for plaintiffs' charges against Olin
and the Olin directors (p 38); (4) on the
same day, the Special Committee was advised
by its investment banker that a range of
prices from $19 to $25 per share would be
fair and the Special Committee then
concluded that $20 was "fair but not
generous" (p 39); (5) the Special Committee
unanimously recommended that Olin consider
raising the merger price,
Page 970 but, on May 11, 1984 Olin advised [12 Del.
J. Corp. L. 1169] that it would not increase
the price (p 40); and (6) on May 14, 1984
the Special Committee met by teleconference
and, on the following day, reported to the
Hunt board of directors that it found $20 to
be fair and recommended approval of the
merger (p 42). In addition to these facts,
the proxy statement discloses that the
Special Committee had two additional
meetings before May 10, 1984 and, that after
plaintiffs' counsel discussed the law suit,
the Special Committee reviewed the legal
arguments raised by counsel for plaintiffs
with its own lawyers. Proxy Statement at 5,
6.
Based upon these facts, the
Complaint charges that the Hunt directors
breached their fiduciary duties by (1)
failing to learn the terms of Olin's price
commitment or its Schedule 13D commitment;
(2) failing to "press Olin's management" for
disclosure of that information or for
disclosure of Olin's intentions; (3) failing
to require that the Special Committee
consider the price commitment or the
Schedule 13D commitment in considering the
proposed merger; (4) failing to bargain at
arms-length; and (5) giving rubber-stamp
approval to the merger (p 52). In other
words, plaintiffs complain about two
separate wrongs--purported inadequacy of the
Hunt directors' response to the merger
proposal and their failure to act during the
one year prior to the merger.
A.
As plaintiffs acknowledge, the
issue with respect to the Hunt directors'
response to the merger proposal is whether
they exercised informed business judgment.
Gross negligence is the standard to be
applied in deciding first, whether the
directors' decisions were informed, and, if
so, whether the directors may be held liable
for reaching the wrong decision. Smith v.
Van Gorkom, Del.Supr., 488 A.2d 858, 873
(1985).
While it is now settled that
gross negligence is the appropriate legal
standard, the question of what must be
pleaded to state a claim for gross
negligence in this context remains
problematic. As the Supreme Court noted in
Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr., 473 A.2d 805,
812 (1984), the applicable standard of care
has been described in a variety of ways and,
in the view of some commentators, those
descriptions provide little guidance in
evaluating potential liability:
Assuming that one concludes that
a particular expression creates liability
only for acts of "gross negligence" ... the
significant question becomes whether or not
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1170] one has
identified an outcome-determinative factor.
Probably not. ... While we may be told, as
in [Penn Mart Realty Co. v. Becker, Del.Ch.,
298 A.2d 349 (1972) ], that a director's
"gross negligence" will expose him to
liability, little attempt is made to
describe or define "gross negligence."
Veasey and Manning, Codified
Standard-Safe Harbor or Unchartered Reef? 35
Bus. Law. 919, 928 (1980).
In the corporate area, gross
negligence would appear to mean, "reckless
indifference to or a deliberate disregard of
the stockholders," Allaun v. Consolidated
Oil Co., Del.Ch., 147 A. 257, 261 (1929) or
actions which are "without the bounds of
reason," Gimbel v. Signal Companies, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 599, 615, aff'd, Gimbel v.
Signal Companies, Inc., Del.Supr.,
316 A.2d 619 (1974). These articulations arguably
provide a higher threshold for liability
than does the definition of gross negligence
in general tort law. See Laird v. State of
Delaware, Del.Super., 79C-JA-97, Walsh, J.
(February 9, 1984) slip op. at 4 (" 'gross
negligence' is ... more than ordinary
inadvertence but less than conscious
indifference to consequences."); Prosser,
Law of Torts at 212 (5th ed. 1984) (same).
Under any of these definitions,
however, I find that the Complaint does not
state a claim against the Hunt directors for
failure to exercise due care in responding
to the merger proposal. The Special
Committee consulted with independent legal
and financial advisors; considered the
merger proposal on at least four occasions
over a period of approximately six weeks;
and reviewed the allegations in plaintiffs'
original
Page 971 complaint first with counsel for plaintiffs
and then with its own lawyers. Consistent
with the advice of its investment banker,
the Special Committee concluded that the
offered price was fair. However, before
recommending the merger at that price, the
Special Committee asked Olin to raise its
price. After Olin refused, the Special
Committee recommended approval of the
merger. From these facts, no inference could
be drawn either that the Hunt directors were
uninformed or were grossly negligent in
recommending the merger.
Plaintiffs focus on two purported
weaknesses in this course of conduct. First,
they allege that the Hunt directors were
unaware of the Olin price commitment and the
Schedule 13D commitment. As a result, the
Special Committee's investment banker was
never asked to consider the impact of those
commitments on the fairness of the offered
price. Assuming, as one must for purposes of
this motion, [12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1171] that
the Special Committee initially was unaware
of the Olin commitments, that information
was provided by plaintiffs' counsel before
the Special Committee recommended the
merger. Thus, any claim that the Hunt
directors were uninformed is defeated by
plaintiffs' own allegations.
The charge that the Special
Committee was grossly negligent in failing
to seek advice from its investment banker as
to the impact of the Olin commitments on the
merger price similarly is deficient. It is a
legal, not a financial, question whether
Olin's commitments had any bearing on the
merger proposal. Thus, only if the legal
question were answered in the affirmative
would there be a basis for arguing that the
investment banker should have been called
upon to evaluate this issue. The Special
Committee discussed the legal question with
its independent counsel and there is nothing
in the Complaint to suggest that the
committee then ignored its counsel's advice.
Thus, there is no reason to believe that the
scope of the financial evaluation should
have been expanded. Even if it arguably
would have been more prudent to raise the
commitments issue with the investment
banker, the failure to do so does not amount
to gross negligence.
Plaintiffs' second argument is
directed at the Special Committee's attempt
to obtain a higher price from Olin. Given
the fact that the Special Committee had
decided to ask Olin to increase the merger
price, plaintiffs say that it was a breach
of fiduciary duty thereafter to recommend
the merger at the original price. In other
words, plaintiffs suggest that once
directors start to bargain for a better deal
they are precluded from accepting the
original proposal. Plaintiffs apparently
derive this theory by weaving together three
different cases to reach a legal premise
advanced by none of them and inapplicable
under the facts here alleged.
Plaintiffs rely on
Smith v. Van Gorkom, 488 A.2d at 881,
for the proposition that a board may not
allow itself to be "stampeded into a
patently unadvised act." Rather, directors
have an affirmative duty to obtain the
highest possible price for their
stockholders. Revlon, Inc. v. McAndrews &
Forbes Holdings, Inc., Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173 (1986). Thus, a Special Committee must
vigorously defend the interests of the
minority stockholders by opposing an
inadequate merger proposal, as in Joseph v.
Shell Oil Co., Del.Ch.,
482 A.2d 335 (1984).
Although each of these legal principles is
sound, they do not, in combination, require
directors to oppose a merger simply because
they were unsuccessful in attempts to
negotiate a higher price.
[12 Del. J. Corp. L. 1172]
Moreover, there are no parallels between the
facts of those three cases and the
allegations in plaintiffs' Complaint. In Van
Gorkom, the defendant directors were held
liable for breach of the fiduciary duty of
care where they approved a merger proposal
(1) during the two hour meeting at which the
subject was first raised; (2) based solely
upon a twenty minute oral presentation of
the merger terms; and (3) without being
informed as to the intrinsic value of the
company. The Special Committee, by contrast,
met on at least four occasions over six
weeks, obtained independent legal and
financial advice, considered plaintiffs'
allegations and attempted to obtain a higher
price before recommending the merger.
Page 972
The facts in Revlon bear
absolutely no resemblance to the facts in
this case. In Revlon, after it had become
apparent that the defendant company was up
for sale, the directors were charged with
the duty of obtaining the highest possible
price for their stockholders. Plaintiffs'
Complaint contains no allegations suggesting
that there was or could have been an auction
for Hunt. Indeed, plaintiffs apparently
recognize that Olin, as the majority
stockholder, was the only viable purchaser
since their concerns are directed solely at
the alleged inadequacy of the Hunt
directors' negotiations with Olin.
Finally, in Shell, a $55 per
share merger proposal was rejected by the
board's Special Committee after its
investment banker advised that the stock was
worth $80-85 per share and the company's
president opined that the stock might be
worth as much as $91 per share. Hunt's
Special Committee, by contrast, was advised
by its investment banker that $20 per share
was fair.
A fair reading of the Complaint
reveals that plaintiffs are simply
dissatisfied with the manner in which the
Hunt directors exercised their business
judgment. Standing alone, however, such
dissatisfaction fails to state a claim.
There are no factual allegations which, if
proven, would result in a finding that the
Hunt directors were uninformed or were
grossly negligent in reaching their
conclusions.
B.
Plaintiffs' claim with respect to
the Hunt directors' failure to act during
the one year price commitment, however, must
be measured against different standards. The
business judgment rule may apply to a
deliberate decision not to act, but it has
no bearing on a claim that directors'
inaction was the result of ignorance.
Aronson v. Lewis, Del.Supr., 473 A.2d 805,
813 (1984). Directors will be held liable
for injuries caused as a result of their
neglect where they [12 Del. J. Corp. L.
1173] fail to use "that amount of care which
ordinarily careful and prudent men would use
in similar circumstances." Graham v. Allis
Chalmers Manufacturing Co., Del.Supr., 188
A.2d 125, 130 (1963).
As to the "neglect" claim, the
Complaint alleges that the Hunt directors
never learned the terms of the stock
purchase agreement between Olin and Turner &
Newall and never asked Olin what its
intentions were with respect to the
acquisition of Hunt's publicly held stock.
Although there is nothing in the Complaint
to explain how the Hunt directors' failure
to act prior to March 1, 1984 resulted in
any injury
3, the
Complaint does contain a general allegation
of damages following the specific
allegations of neglect. (p 53).
I find that the Hunt directors'
alleged failure to learn of Olin's price
commitment states a claim. It may well be
that, in the exercise of ordinary care, the
Hunt directors should have known that the
company's controlling stockholder had a one
year contractual commitment to the minority
stockholders. Whether the Hunt directors'
alleged ignorance caused any injury is
questionable. However, for purposes of this
motion, the fact that damages are alleged is
sufficient to sustain plaintiffs' claim.
Based upon the foregoing, the
Hunt directors' motion to dismiss is granted
except as to the claim based upon their
failure to act during the one year prior to
March 1, 1984.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
1 Significantly, the Court noted that
"the act of forming [the subsidiary] for the
aforesaid purpose and using the merger
process under Delaware statutes to acquire
ownership of [another corporation] may well
constitute such a minimum contact as to
subject [the foreign defendant] to service
of process under the foreign attachment or
sequestration statutes." Id. at 9.
2 Messrs. Bonniwell, Lause, Petschek and
Haufler constituted the Special Committee.
3 At oral argument, plaintiffs' counsel
merely stated that, if the Hunt directors
had pressed Olin, the result might have been
different. |