| Page 300 549 A.2d 300
57 USLW 2269 Louise SIMONS, Plaintiff Below,
Appellant,
v.
Marshall S. COGAN, Stephen D. Weinroth,
Hansac, Inc.,
General Felt Industries, Inc. and Knoll
International
Holding, Inc., formerly known as GFI/Knoll
International
Holding Company, Knoll International, Inc.,
Defendants
Below, Appellees. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: May 17, 1988.
Decided: Oct. 19, 1988. Robert Goldberg, of Biggs &
Battaglia, Wilmington, Mitchell A. Kramer,
Steven M. Steingard (argued) and Larry M.
Keller, Esquire of Mitchell A. Kramer &
Associates, Philadelphia, for appellant.
Page 301
Allen M. Terrell, Jr. (argued)
and Michael J. Feinstein, of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, and Phillip
Smith, of Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Feld,
Dallas, Tex., for appellees.
Before HORSEY, WALSH and HOLLAND,
JJ.
WALSH, Justice:
This is an appeal from a decision
of the Court of Chancery, 542 A.2d 785,
granting a motion to dismiss a class action
brought by Louise Simons ("Simons"), a
holder of convertible subordinated
debentures, against the issuing corporation,
Knoll International, Inc. ("Knoll"), its
controlling shareholder, Marshall S. Cogan
("Cogan"), and other related corporate
constituents. Simons' complaint asserted
claims based on violations of fiduciary
duty, breach of indenture and common law
fraud. In granting the motion to dismiss,
the Court of Chancery determined that the
issuing corporation and its directors do not
owe a fiduciary duty to the debenture
holders. In addition, the court ruled that
the restrictive provisions of the indenture
agreement precluded a claim for breach of
indenture. Finally, the court dismissed the
fraud claim holding that Simons' complaint
failed to plead facts constituting
actionable fraud. We agree with the
reasoning and holding of the Court of
Chancery and accordingly affirm the judgment
in all respects.
I
A brief recitation of the facts,
consistent with the procedural setting of
this appeal and based essentially on the
allegations of the complaint, will suffice.
The transaction challenged in
this case involves the merger of two related
corporations, Hansac, Inc. ("Hansac") and
Knoll.
1 The
merger which was completed on January 22,
1987, left Knoll, the surviving corporation,
as the wholly owned subsidiary of Knoll
Holdings. The merger caused the minority
shareholders of Knoll to be eliminated
through a $12 cash tender offer.
Significantly, the merger also
resulted in the execution of a supplemental
indenture which eliminated the right of
Knoll's convertible debenture holders to
convert their debentures into shares of its
common stock. The supplemental indenture,
which was executed by Knoll and the
indenture trustee, provided that in lieu of
the right to convert into the common stock
of Knoll, the debentures would be
convertible into $12.00 cash for each $19.20
principal amount of debenture. An additional
supplemental indenture was also executed
increasing the interest rate on the
debentures from 8 1/2 percent to 9 7/8
percent per annum.
Simons filed a class action on
behalf of the holders of Knoll's convertible
debentures asserting as a primary cause of
action that the defendants, in terminating
the right to convert the debentures into the
common stock of Knoll, breached a fiduciary
duty to the debenture holders. In support of
this claim the complaint essentially
alleges: (1) Cogan, as the controlling
shareholder of both Knoll and Hansac,
unilaterally set the $12 conversion price
without negotiating with a representative of
the debenture holders; (2) there were
conflicts of interest among Knoll's
directors and no special committee of
independent directors was formed to evaluate
the transaction; (3) Knoll's directors did
not seek other offers to acquire Knoll; and
(4) the transaction was timed to take
advantage of the 1986 low point in the
trading price of Knoll's shares and
debentures. Moreover, it is claimed that the
$12 conversion price was unfair and
inadequate.
The complaint also contains
claims sounding in breach of contract. It is
alleged that Knoll breached the terms of the
indenture by changing the conversion feature
Page 302 without the approval of all debenture
holders as required by section 15.02 of the
indenture. Further, the complaint premises a
breach of contract claim on the allegation
that Knoll also violated section 15.02 by
entering into a supplemental indenture
without obtaining the required consent of
the holders of not less than a majority of
the aggregate principal amount of debentures
outstanding.
In what Simons characterizes as a
fraud claim, the complaint alleges that
materially false and misleading statements
or omissions of material information were
made in a 1983 prospectus published in
connection with the original distribution of
debentures and in the 1986 offering circular
issued pursuant to the tender offer portion
of the merger. In support of this claim the
complaint asserts that: (1) the offering
circular fails to state how the $12 per
share price and merger consideration was
determined; (2) the offering circular used
an incorrect effective tax rate in
projecting Knoll's 1987 operating income;
(3) the offering circular failed to disclose
that the investment banker who rendered a
fairness opinion on the $12 tender offer had
previously recommended $16 per share as an
excellent value; and (4) the 1983 prospectus
issued pursuant to the sale of the
debentures did not state that Knoll would
not seek the consent of the debenture
holders as required by the indenture, before
supplementing the indenture.
Defendants filed a motion to
dismiss the complaint on the grounds that it
failed to state a valid cause of action. In
granting the motion the Chancellor ruled
that Simons, as a debenture holder, did not
share in a fiduciary relationship with the
issuing corporation or its directors and the
complaint failed to plead facts necessary to
maintain an action for fraud. He also held
that the "no recourse" provision of the
indenture barred an action based on breach
of indenture against all defendants except
the issuing corporation and the terms of the
indenture barred Simons from bringing suit
on the indenture without initially making a
demand on the indenture trustee on behalf of
35 percent of the outstanding debentures.
II
The first issue presented in this
appeal, whether the directors of the issuing
corporation owe a fiduciary duty to the
holders of convertible debentures, requires
that we revisit a question addressed
indirectly in an earlier opinion of this
Court, Harff v. Kerkorian, Del.Supr.,
347 A.2d 133 (1975).
This Court's holding in Harff is
best understood in the context of the Court
of Chancery decision which it reviewed. In
Harff, the plaintiffs had sought relief in
the Court of Chancery, both derivatively and
on behalf of a class. Harff v. Kerkorian,
Del.Ch.,
324 A.2d 215 (1974). Regarding
plaintiff's first claim, the Chancellor held
that convertible debenture holders did not
have standing as "stockholders" for purposes
of maintaining a derivative action. Id. at
219. The court reasoned that, until the
conversion feature is exercised, the
debenture holders stand as creditors of the
corporation with their rights determined by
the indenture contract. The plaintiff in
Harff also sought to assert class action
rights, independent of the indenture, based
on an alleged fiduciary duty owed by the
director defendants to the debenture
holders. In rejecting that assertion, the
Chancellor concluded that such independent
claims must be based on "special
circumstances":
It is apparent that unless there are
special circumstances which affect the
rights of the debenture holders as creditors
of the corporation, e.g., fraud, insolvency,
or a violation of a statute, the rights of
the debenture holders are confined to the
terms of the Indenture Agreement pursuant to
which the debentures were issued.
324 A.2d at 222 (citations
omitted).
On appeal, this Court, in a per
curiam opinion, did not directly consider
the broad question of whether a fiduciary
obligation extends to debenture holders.
Instead this Court reversed on the narrow
ground that the Court of Chancery improperly
granted summary judgment against the
plaintiffs on their fraud claim. This
Court's failure
Page 303 to expressly endorse the fiduciary analysis
of the Court of Chancery has led to
speculation as to whether a residual
fiduciary obligation is owed to debenture
holders. See e.g., Continental Illinois
Nat'l Bank and Trust Co. of Chicago v. Hunt
Int'l Resources Corp., Del.Ch., No. 7888,
7844, Jacobs, V.C. (Feb. 27, 1987) (holding
that a debenture holder has no independent
right to maintain a claim for breach of
fiduciary duty); Norte & Co. v. Manor Health
Corp., Del.Ch., No. 6827, 6831, Berger, V.C.
(Nov. 21, 1985) (same). But see Green v.
Hamilton Int'l Corp., S.D.N.Y., 76 Civ. 5433
(July 13, 1981) (holding that a cause of
action for breach of fiduciary duty may lie
under Delaware law apart from the express
terms of the indenture agreement).
Our decision in Harff, if read
against the enlarged holding of the Court of
Chancery, does not support the inference
that, under Delaware law, a fiduciary duty
is owed to debenture holders. In dismissing
the class claim, the Chancellor found no
fiduciary relationships but noted that the
class, as creditors of the corporation and
apart from the debenture provisions, could
seek recovery for "fraud, insolvency or a
violation of a statute." Since the
plaintiffs in Harff conceded the absence of
insolvency or statutory violation, the sole
focus of the Chancellor was upon the claim
of fraud. He concluded that fraud was not
alleged in the complaint. On appeal, this
Court reached a contrary conclusion as to
the fraud allegation and remanded for a
factual determination. We did not differ,
however, with the Chancellor's substantive
analysis. In effect, this Court permitted
the class action in Harff to proceed because
plaintiffs had brought themselves within the
fraud exception, not because the complaint
stated a cause of action for breach of
fiduciary duty.
Notwithstanding the clear
inference of our holding in Harff, we deem
it advisable to address directly the
fiduciary claim asserted by Simons here and
in the Court of Chancery. In order to
determine whether a holder of a convertible
debenture is owed a fiduciary duty by the
issuing corporation and its directors we
must begin our analysis with an examination
of the nature of the interest or entitlement
underlying a convertible debenture. A
debenture represents a long term unsecured
debt of the issuing corporation convertible
into stock under certain specified
conditions. Cf. 6A H. Schlagman, Fletcher
Cyclopedia of the Law of Private
Corporations § 2640.1 (perm. ed. 1981)
(discussing convertible bonds). A debenture
is a credit instrument which does not
devolve upon its holder an equity interest
in the issuing corporation. See Kusner v.
First Pennsylvania Corp., E.D.Pa., 395
F.Supp. 276, 281 (1975), rev'd on other
grounds, 3d Cir.,
531 F.2d 1234 (1976).
Similarly, the convertibility feature of the
debenture does not impart an equity element
until conversion occurs. This distinction
was noted by the Chancellor in Harff:
"That a bond is convertible at the sole
option of its holder into stock should no
more affect its essential quality of being a
bond than should the fact that cash is
convertible into stock affect the nature of
cash. Any bond, or any property, for that
matter, is convertible into stock through
the intermediate step of converting it to
cash. ... [C]ase law indicates that a
convertible debenture is a bond and not an
equity security until conversion occurs."
Harff
v. Kerkorian, 324 A.2d at 220 (quoting
In re Will of Migel, Sup.Ct., 71 Misc.2d
640, 336 N.Y.S.2d 376, 379 (1972))
(citations omitted). In sum, a convertible
debenture represents a contractual
entitlement to the repayment of a debt and
does not represent an equitable interest in
the issuing corporation necessary for the
imposition of a trust relationship with
concomitant fiduciary duties.
Briggs v. Spaulding, 141 U.S. 132, 147, 11
S.Ct. 924, 929, 35 L.Ed. 662 (1891)
(discussing relationship between duty and
nature of undertaking).
Simons argues that this
traditional analysis has been softened by
cases which have held that convertible
debenture holders possess an interest in the
underlying corporation sufficient to warrant
the imposition of fiduciary duties. Typical
of this expansive theory is Green v.
Hamilton Int'l Corp., S.D.N.Y., 76 Civ. 5433
(July 13, 1981).
Page 304 Interpreting the significance of the
opinion. in Harff, the court in Green
reasoned:
[Harff] supports two propositions
relevant to the matter before this Court.
First, under Delaware law, convertible
debenture holders do not possess all the
rights of shareholders with respect to
actions taken by corporate directors or
majority shareholders. Second, in certain
circumstances, a holder of a convertible
debenture is entitled to different treatment
from a mere creditor of a corporation, and a
cause of action for breach of fiduciary duty
may lie under Delaware law apart from the
express terms of an Indenture Agreement.
....
As holders of convertible debentures,
plaintiffs were part of the entire community
of interests in the corporation--creditors
as well as stockholders to whom the
fiduciary duties of directors and
controlling shareholders run.
Id. (citations omitted).
As previously indicated, we do
not believe that our holding in Harff
supports an inference that a fiduciary duty
is owed to holders of convertible
debentures. Nor are we persuaded by the
reasoning in Green. In relying on an
expectancy interest created by the
conversion feature of the debenture, the
Green court misperceives the type of
interest required for the imposition of
fiduciary duties under Delaware law. As this
Court recently noted in Anadarko Petroleum
Corp. v. Panhandle Eastern Corp., Del.Supr.,
545 A.2d 1171 (1988) a mere expectancy
interest does not create a fiduciary
relationship. Before a fiduciary duty
arises, an existing property right or
equitable interest supporting such a duty
must exist. The obvious example is stock
ownership. Until the debenture is converted
into stock the convertible debenture holder
acquires no equitable interest, and remains
a creditor of the corporation whose
interests are protected by the contractual
terms of the indenture.
II
Having determined that a
convertible debenture holder does not have
standing to bring a claim based on a breach
of fiduciary duty, we next consider whether
the Court of Chancery properly concluded
that Simons failed to plead facts in her
complaint sufficient to constitute the tort
of fraud. In order to maintain a claim for
fraud the plaintiff must allege that the
defendant, with intent to deceive,
misrepresented a known fact upon which the
plaintiff reasonably relied to her
detriment. See Harman v. Masoneilan Int'l,
Inc., Del.Supr., 442 A.2d 487 (1982). See
also Prosser and Keeton on Torts § 105, at
728 (Keeton 5th ed. 1984).
Although the word "fraud" does
not appear in her complaint, Simons argues
that a claim of fraud is supported by the
complaint's reference to misstatements or
omissions made in the 1983 prospectus
relating to the sale of the debentures, and
in the 1986 offering circular issued
pursuant to the tender offer for Knoll's
minority shares. These allegations, however,
even if taken as true, fail to establish the
necessary element of scienter, i.e., that
Knoll made the statements with intent to
deceive the debenture holders. These
allegations also fail to establish that the
debenture holders relied on these alleged
misstatements to their detriment. The
absence of these essential factual
allegations is fatal to a fraud action.
Accordingly, we hold that the Court of
Chancery properly dismissed Simons' fraud
claim.
III
We next consider whether the "no
recourse" provision of the indenture
operates to insulate all defendants except
the issuing corporation from liability for
breach of the indenture.
2
As the Chancellor
Page 305 correctly noted, the "no recourse" provision
found in Article 13 of the indenture is a
standard provision that enjoys general
acceptance. See Continential Illinois
National Bank, slip op. at 13-14 (discussing
the recognition and parameters of a "no
recourse" provision). Cf. Harff v.
Kerkorian, Del.Ch., 324 A.2d at 217 ("no
recourse" provision as an absolute defense
to actions by debenture holders against
directors). See also 3A H. Schlagman,
Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private
Corporations § 1241.1 (perm. ed. 1986). The
meaning of the "no recourse" provision is
clear--it extends broad immunity to
stockholders, directors and officers of the
issuing corporation. Accordingly, we agree
with the Court of Chancery that since the
"no recourse" provision of the indenture
limits liability for breach of contract to
Knoll, the issuing corporation, the motion
to dismiss the contractual claim against the
individual defendants must be granted.
IV
Finally we consider the Court of
Chancery's holding that Simon is precluded
by section 8.08 of the indenture from
bringing a claim for breach of indenture
against the issuing corporation. Section
8.08 of the indenture provides in part:
No holder of any Debenture shall
have any right to institute any action, suit
or proceeding at law or in equity for the
execution of any trust hereunder or for the
appointment of a receiver or for any other
remedy hereunder, unless (i) such holder
previously shall have given to the Trustee
written notice of the happening and
continuing of one or more of the Events of
Default herein specified, (ii) the holders
of 35 percent in principal amount of the
Debentures then outstanding shall have
requested the Trustee in writing to take
action in respect of the matter complained
of, and shall have afforded to it a
reasonable opportunity either to proceed to
exercise the powers herein granted or to
institute such action, suit or proceeding in
its own name....
The purpose of section 8.08 "is
to deter individual debenture-holders from
bringing independent law suits for unworthy
or unjustifiable reasons, causing expense to
the Company and diminishing its assets."
American Bar Foundation, Commentaries on
Model Debenture Indenture Provisions § 5-7,
at 232 (1971). Such limitations on the
bringing of a suit are standard in indenture
agreements and have been generally upheld by
the courts. Id. at 233.
Thus, under the terms of the
indenture the holders of 35 percent in
principal amount of debenture must make a
written request to the trustee to institute
suit before any one of them can bring a
claim based on an alleged violation of the
indenture. Simons' complaint does not assert
that the 35 percent threshold of section
8.08 has been satisfied and Simons tacitly
concedes that it has not. Such a concession
appears fatal to Simons' claims for breach
of indenture.
Simons counters, however, that
the Chancellor, in concluding that section
8.08 was controlling, failed to consider the
effect of section 8.09 of the indenture
which provides:
No remedy herein conferred upon or
reserved to the Trustee or to the holders of
Debentures is intended to be exclusive of
any other remedy or remedies, and each and
every remedy shall be cumulative and shall
be in addition to every other remedy given
hereunder or now or hereafter existing at
law or in equity or by statute.
Simons argues that the thrust of
section 8.09 is to allow debenture holders
to bring claims for violation of the
indenture independent of the procedural
provisions of section 8.08. We disagree.
Section 8.09 is a
Page 306 general provision providing for cumulative
remedies, i.e., the indenture trustee or
debenture holders have the right, apart from
the indenture, to seek relief for statutory
violations or fraud. However, section 8.09
cannot reasonably be read to circumvent the
standing restrictions of section 8.08 which
specifically restricts enforcement "of any
right hereunder." The Chancellor correctly
applied the bar of section 8.08 in
dismissing the contract claims against the
corporation.
Finally, Simons contends that the
Court of Chancery should have granted her
leave to amend her complaint to supply the
fraud allegation deficiencies. No such
request was made in the Court of Chancery,
however, and this Court in the usual
exercise of its appellate jurisdiction will
not review questions not raised below.
Supreme Court Rule 8. We do not deem it in
the "interests of justice" in this case to
examine the merits of a motion to amend the
complaint without the benefit of the trial
court's view of the matter and decline to do
so.
* * *
* * *
The decision of the Court of
Chancery dismissing Simons' complaint is
AFFIRMED.
1 Hansac is a wholly owned subsidiary of
GFI Nevada, Inc. ("GFI Nevada"). GFI Nevada
is wholly owned by General Felt Industries,
Inc. which is in turn wholly owned by Knoll
International Holding, Inc. ("Knoll
Holding"). Knoll Holding through its
subsidiary GFI Nevada controls approximately
90.5 percent of the voting stock of Knoll.
Marshall S. Cogan, an individual defendant,
controls 51.5 percent of the voting
interests of Knoll Holding giving him
effective control of both Hansac and Knoll.
2 The "no recourse" provision, found in
article 13 of the indenture, provides in
part:
No recourse shall be had for the payment
of the principal of, premium, if any, or the
interest on any Debentures, or any part
thereof, or for any claim based thereon or
otherwise in respect thereof, or of the
indebtedness represented thereby, or upon
any obligation, covenant or agreement of
this Indenture, against any incorporator, or
against any stockholder, officer or
director, as such, past, present or future,
of the Company, or of any predecessor or
successor corporation, either directly or
through the Company or any such predecessor
or successor corporation, whether by virtue
of any constitution, statute or rule of law,
or by the enforcement of any assessment or
penalty or otherwise; it being expressly
agreed and understood that this Indenture
and all the Debentures are solely corporate
obligations, and that no personal liability
whatsoever shall attach to, or be incurred
by, any such incorporator, stockholder,
officer or director, past, present or future
of the Company.... |