| Page 482 552 A.2d 482
80 A.L.R.4th 641, 57 USLW 2466
Ronald P. BERLIN, David L. Florence,
Craig Hall, Rex A.
Sebastian, Theodore H. Strauss and May
Petroleum,
Inc., a corporation of the State of
Delaware, Defendants Below, Appellants,
v.
EMERALD PARTNERS, a New Jersey limited
partnership,
Plaintiff Below, Appellee. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: Aug. 15, 1988.
Oral Decision: Aug. 15, 1988.
Written Opinion: Jan. 12, 1989. William Prickett, Wayne N.
Elliott, John H. Small, Vernon R. Proctor of
Prickett, Jones, Elliott, Kristol & Schnee,
Michael D. Goldman, Donald J. Wolfe, Jr.,
William J. Marsden, Jr. of Potter, Anderson
& Corroon, Wilmington, A.B. Conant, Jr.
(argued), Ivan Irwin, Jr. of Shank, Irwin,
Conant, Lipshy & Casterline, Louis Bickel,
Margaret L. Vandervalk, of Akin, Gump,
Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Dallas, Tex., and
Daniel F. Berry of Simpson & Moran,
Birmingham, Mich., on behalf of appellants.
R. Franklin Balotti (argued), and
Gregory V. Varallo of Richards, Layton &
Finger, Wilmington, Robert J. Schechter of
Koether, Harris & Hoffman, New York City, on
behalf of appellee.
Before CHRISTIE, C.J., HORSEY,
MOORE, HOLLAND, JJ., and BIFFERATO, Judge
(sitting by designation pursuant to Del.
Const. art. IV., § 12) (constituting the
Court en banc ).
HOLLAND, Justice, for the
majority.
Emerald Partners ("Emerald"), a
New Jersey limited partnership, brought this
action in the Court of Chancery on March 1,
1988. The defendants are May Petroleum, Inc.
("May"), a Delaware corporation; its three
outside directors, David L. Florence, Rex A.
Sebastion, and Theodore H. Strauss; and its
two inside directors, Craig Hall and Ronald
P. Berlin (collectively, "the May Board").
Emerald originally brought this suit
individually, and subsequently amended its
complaint to allege class and derivative
claims.
Emerald sought to enjoin the
consummation of a merger between May and
thirteen corporations owned by Craig Hall
("Hall"), the Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer of May. Following extensive
discovery, a preliminary injunction hearing
was held on March 16, 1988. The Court of
Chancery entered an order on March 18, 1988,
preliminarily enjoining consummation of the
May merger with the Hall corporations on the
grounds that:
(a) Under a provision of the May
certificate of incorporation, a
supermajority
Page 485 vote of the May stockholders on the merger
was required; and
(b) At the special meeting of the
May stockholders, either no quorum was
present or the merger did not receive the
requisite supermajority vote.
This case was accepted, on an
expedited basis, as an interlocutory appeal
under Supreme Court Rule 42. Following oral
arguments and deliberations on August 15,
1988, this Court announced its decision.
1 A majority of
this Court held that the provision of the
May certificate of incorporation requiring a
supermajority vote was not applicable, under
the facts of this case, to the merger
proposal presented to the May stockholders.
However, the Court was in unanimous
agreement that if the supermajority
provision in the May certificate of
incorporation was applicable to the merger
proposal, the requisite supermajority vote
had been achieved. Therefore, the judgment
of the Court of Chancery preliminarily
enjoining the merger was reversed, the
injunction was vacated, and a mandate
remanding the case was issued forthwith.
This opinion sets forth the reasons for the
decision that was announced on August 15,
1988. Supr.Ct.R. 19.
Facts
The parties to the challenged
merger are May and thirteen Sub-chapter S
corporations owned by Hall ("the Hall
corporations"). The Hall corporations are
primarily engaged in the real estate service
business. May is a Delaware corporation
headquartered in Dallas, Texas. May had been
engaged in the business of oil and gas
exploration until July 30, 1987, when May
sold substantially all of its income
producing properties. Since that time, May
has ceased to be an operating company. Its
assets consist primarily of cash, marketable
securities, a limited partnership interest,
and net operating loss and capital loss
carry forwards (collectively "NOL's").
Although May had not been financially
successful in recent years, reporting losses
of approximately $80 million from 1983 to
1986, May remained an attractive takeover
target due to the liquidity of its assets
and a net operating loss carryover of
approximately $54 million.
During the years 1983 through
1986, while May was losing approximately $80
million, audited financial statements show
that the Hall corporations made
approximately $67 million. In October of
1987, Hall controlled at least 52% of May's
outstanding common stock. On October 24,
1987, at a special meeting of May's
directors, Hall requested that the outside
directors of May's Board agree to examine
the possibility of a merger with the Hall
corporations.
On November 7, 1987, May's Board
decided to consider a merger proposal. The
outside directors retained the investment
banking firm of Bear Stearns & Co., Inc., to
assess the terms of any merger and
ultimately to issue a fairness opinion. The
law firm of Shank, Irwin, Conant, Lipshy &
Casterline
2 was
retained by the outside directors to advise
and negotiate a fair arrangement for the
minority stockholders. Arthur Anderson &
Company was hired to verify the financial
statements of May and the Hall corporations.
On November 24, 1987, the May
Board met and was presented with the
preliminary valuations of May and the Hall
corporations. Following this presentation,
Hall agreed to accept 27 million shares of
May stock in exchange for his shares in the
Hall corporations. May and the Hall
corporations entered into a proposed merger
agreement on November 30, 1987. The
execution of the merger agreement was made
public through a press release that was
disseminated by the May Board.
Emerald is a minority stockholder
of May. Emerald was formed and is controlled
by Paul Koether ("Koether") and his wife,
Natalie Koether, Esquire. On December 10,
1987, Hall met with Koether
Page 486 in Dallas, Texas, at Koether's request.
Koether told Hall that he represented
interests which owned 450,000 shares of
May's stock.
3
Koether explained to Hall that he and his
wife made money by selling their stock
positions back to the issuing companies at a
significant profit. Koether proposed that he
and Hall become partners in these types of
"greenmail" transactions.4
Koether's efforts to persuade
Hall to join forces with him for the purpose
of investing in several stocks were
unsuccessful. However, Hall inquired of
Koether about buying out Emerald's stock
holdings in May. At the time of Hall's
request, May had a nominal market value of
approximately $1.00 per share. Koether
stated that Emerald would sell its May stock
at a price of $1.80 per share before January
1, 1988, and at $2.24 per share thereafter.
This offer was rejected by Hall. Koether
replied that if Hall did not purchase
Emerald's stock holdings in May, he would
purchase additional stock in May. Koether
suggested that the provisions of Article
Fourteenth of the May certificate of
incorporation made it possible for him to
block, or make it difficult for Hall to
complete, the proposed merger.
Article Fourteenth of the May
certificate of incorporation requires that
for May to be a party to certain business
combinations, the proposed combination must
receive a supermajority vote. In particular,
such a vote is required where the proposed
merger is between May and an acquiring
entity owning in excess of 30% of May stock.
Since Hall owned or controlled approximately
52% of the May stock, the provisions of
Article Fourteenth were applicable to the
proposed merger with the Hall corporations.
Therefore, if Koether followed through with
his intention to acquire more of May's stock
through Emerald, he arguably would be able
to block the proposed merger by virtue of
Emerald's minority holdings of May's stock.
Hall was concerned that Emerald
would continue to acquire May stock and that
the supermajority vote required by Article
Fourteenth could not be obtained. In fact,
Hall perceived, and the Court of Chancery
characterized, Emerald's statements to Hall
as a "threat." Accordingly, Hall decided to
"drop down", or reduce, the amount of May
stock which he controlled. His initial
inclination was to donate a substantial
portion of his May stock to charity.
However, he and the other May directors were
advised that such a charitable contribution
would result in the loss to May of a very
valuable asset, i.e., the NOL's.
Thereafter, Hall and the May
Board were advised that Hall could transfer
a significant portion of his May stock to an
irrevocable trust for his children, with
independent trustees, and a smaller
percentage of the stock to charity, without
the loss of May's NOL's. This suggestion
appealed to Hall. A portion of May stock
would be removed from Hall's control for
purposes of Article Fourteenth and the
transfer would further his charitable and
estate planning objectives.
On January 28, 1988, the May
Board met and set March 8, 1988, as the date
for a special meeting of the stockholders to
vote upon the merger proposal with the Hall
corporations. The record date was set as
February 2, 1988. On February 1, 1988,
effective January 29, 1988, Hall transferred
3,981,771 shares of May stock (constituting
27% of May's outstanding common stock) to an
independent irrevocable trust, set up for
the benefit of his four daughters ("Hall
1988 Children's Trust"). The two co-trustees
were vested with independent power to vote
or dispose of the shares owned by the trust.
The net effect of this transfer was to
reduce Hall's personal ownership
Page 487 of May stock from 52% to 25%, at a time
prior to the record date, and prior to the
stockholder vote on the merger.
On February 13, 1988, the May
Board reaffirmed the merger agreement which
was eventually presented to and voted upon
by the May stockholders.
5
The May stockholders were advised in a proxy
statement of the reduction in Hall's
percentage of stock ownership as a result of
the transaction with the trust. On February
16, 1988, May released a Proxy Statement to
its stockholders seeking approval of the
merger agreement ("Proposal One") and
approval of an amendment to Article
Fourteenth of the May certificate of
incorporation ("Proposal Two"). The proxy
statement addressed the issue of the need
for approval of the merger by a majority
vote rather than a supermajority vote after
the drop down in Hall's percentage of
ownership.
6
Pursuant to the May bylaws and
the proxy statement, the stockholders of May
held a special meeting in March for the
purpose of voting on the two proposals. Of
the 14,655,660 shares entitled to vote as of
the record date, 11,834,661 shares were
represented in person or by proxy.
Approximately 10,513,703 shares were voted
as to Proposal One, with 9,934,172 votes in
favor. With respect to Proposal Two, of the
11,834,661 shares represented, 11,151,902
voted in favor.
Applicability of Supermajority Vote
Provision
The Court of Chancery granted
Emerald a preliminary injunction enjoining
the consummation of the merger because the
stockholder approval of the merger failed to
meet the supermajority voting requirements
of Article Fourteenth of May's certificate
of incorporation. The first issue to be
decided on appeal is whether this
supermajority vote requirement is applicable
to the merger proposal. In pertinent part,
the supermajority vote provision states:
No Business Combination shall be effected
unless it is approved at a meeting of the
Corporation's stockholders called for that
purpose. The presence in person or by proxy
of the holders of not less than 80% of the
voting securities of the Corporation shall
be required to constitute a quorum at any
such meeting. The affirmative vote of 66-
2/3% of the voting power present, in person
or by proxy, at such meeting, excluding all
voting securities owned beneficially, by the
Acquiring Entity, shall be required for
approval of any such Business Combination.
May's certificate of
incorporation defines a Business Combination
as "any merger or consolidation of the
Corporation [May] with or into any other
corporation, person or other entity which is
the beneficial owner, directly or
indirectly, of 30% or more of the
outstanding voting securities of the
Corporation." May's certificate of
incorporation also provides that the
supermajority vote of minority stockholders
is required unless the May Board authorized
the Business Combination:
prior to the time that any such
corporation, person or other entity became
the beneficial owner, directly or
indirectly, of 30% or more of the
outstanding voting securities of the
Corporation. A corporation, person or other
entity which is the beneficial owner,
directly or indirectly, of 30% or more of
the Corporation's outstanding voting
securities (taken together as a single
class) is herein referred to as the
"Acquiring Entity".
Page 488
The Court of Chancery interpreted
Article Fourteenth of May's certificate of
incorporation as requiring a supermajority
vote to approve a merger with any entity
that held 30% or more of May's outstanding
common stock at the time the May Board voted
to recommend the merger. This interpretation
makes the percentage of stock ownership on
the date of the directors' vote
determinative of the applicability of
Article Fourteenth. The Court of Chancery
concluded that since the May Board
authorized the merger on November 30, 1987,
"long after Mr. Hall, the Acquiring Entity,
obtained 30% of May's stock and while he
still controlled it," the supermajority vote
requirements were applicable to the merger.
Emerald urges this Court to affirm that
conclusion.
The appellants contend that the
critical time for determining the
applicability of Article Fourteenth is the
date of the stockholder vote. The appellants
argue that the supermajority vote provision
applies only to a merger with an Acquiring
Entity (30% stockholder). Since Hall only
owned 25% of May's common stock at the time
the merger was ratified by the stockholders,
the appellants contend that there was no
Acquiring Entity being merged into May.
Accordingly, the appellants argue that the
supermajority vote provision in Article
Fourteenth did not apply to the proposed
merger.
In examining the provisions of a
certificate of incorporation, courts apply
the rules of contract interpretation.
Hibbert v. Hollywood Park, Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 339 (1983). "We only construe the
[provision] ... as it is written, and we
give language which is clear, simple, and
unambiguous the force and effect required."
Id. at 343. Put another way, the best
evidence of the intention of the parties is
often found in the express language of a
written contract. 4 S. Williston, A Treatise
on the Law of Contracts § 610 (3d edition
1961 & Supp.1988). Nevertheless, the
contract rights of the stockholders of the
corporation are also subject to the
provisions of the Delaware General
Corporation Law. Loew's
Theatres, Inc. v. Commercial Credit Company,
Del. Ch., 243 A.2d 78, 81 (1968).
The provision for a supermajority
vote in May's certificate of incorporation
is applicable only to a Business
Combination. May's certificate of
incorporation defines a Business Combination
as any merger or consolidation between May
and "any other ... entity which is the
beneficial owner ... of 30% or more of the
outstanding voting securities of [May]."
(emphasis added). The Delaware General
Corporation Law provides that,
notwithstanding certain filing requirements,
see e.g., 8 Del.C. § 103 (1983 & Supp.1988),
a merger is not complete until the
stockholders of the corporations have voted
to approve it. See, 8 Del.C. § 251(c)
(Supp.1988). In this case, we find no
inconsistency between May's certificate of
incorporation and the applicable provisions
of the Delaware General Corporation Law.
The Court of Chancery correctly
recognized that the proposed merger could
not be effective until the stockholders
voted. However, the Court of Chancery
concluded that, by its terms, Article
Fourteenth applied at the time the May
stockholders voted upon this merger, because
Hall owned more than 30% (52%) of May's
stock at the time the directors voted to
recommend it. We do not find that there is
anything in the language of Article
Fourteenth which requires its application to
any merger with an entity, which is not then
the owner of 30% or more of the company, if
that entity had ever previously owned 30% or
more of May's stock. If Article Fourteenth
was intended to apply to such situations, it
could have expressly so provided.
7
Supermajority provisions take
various forms and are generally intended to
offer protection to minority stockholders
from a majority stockholder who would, but
for the supermajority provision, be able to
Page 489 force a merger onto the corporation.
8 This is so because in
the absence of the supermajority provision,
a mere simple majority of the outstanding
stock of the corporation entitled to vote on
the merger is needed to approve a merger. 8
Del.C. § 251(c) (Supp.1988). The provisions
of the May certificate of incorporation are
specifically designed to protect minority
stockholders only from a major stockholder
who has the ability to dominate a merger
proposal at both stages of the process,
i.e., when the board votes and when the
stockholder votes.
The May certificate of
incorporation does not require a
supermajority vote, even with an Acquiring
Entity, if the May Board authorized the
merger proposal prior to the time when 30%
of the May stock was acquired. The
protection of a supermajority vote was
apparently deemed unnecessary and was not
made applicable to a merger proposed by a
board that was not capable of being
"influenced" by a major stockholder (holder
of a 30% or more interest). Conversely, even
if a major stockholder was capable of
"influencing" the board in proposing a
merger, the requirement of a supermajority
vote is not provided for in the May
certificate of incorporation to protect the
minority stockholders from continued
"influence" at the time of the stockholder's
vote, if there has been a reduction in stock
ownership below the 30% level. Apparently,
it was thought that whatever influence might
have been exerted upon the board to suggest
the merger proposal could no longer be
brought to bear at the stockholder's
meeting, after the reduction in stock
ownership below 30%.
The terms of the supermajority
provision are unambiguous. We find that the
relevant time to assess whether the
supermajority vote provision in May's
certificate of incorporation is triggered is
when the merger proposal is presented to the
stockholders for a vote. On the date of the
stockholder vote,
9
if the proposal is for a merger with an
Acquiring Entity, the provisions of the May
certificate of incorporation direct one to
look back to the date of the directors'
resolution to determine the percentage of
votes which are needed to pass the proposal.
If the Acquiring Entity also owned a 30%
interest on the date of the directors'
resolution, a supermajority vote is needed.
If the Acquiring Entity held less than a 30%
interest prior to the directors resolution,
only a majority vote by the stockholders is
necessary. If no one holds a 30% interest on
the date of the stockholders' vote, there
can be no merger with an "Acquiring Entity"
and Article Fourteenth has no applicability
at all.
The operation of the provisions
and the protections afforded by the
supermajority provisions in the May
certificate of incorporation are manifested
by the facts of this case. When Hall
determined that he might be unable to gather
the requisite supermajority vote, he decided
to reduce his ownership of May stock below
30% to avoid the applicability of Article
Fourteenth. However, in so doing, Hall
ceased to be a majority stockholder, and
thus, was incapable of forcing ratification
of the proposed merger by the stockholders.
Reduction in Hall's Stock Holdings
Emerald argues that even under
this Court's construction of Article
Fourteenth,
Page 490 Hall's transfer of stock to the Hall 1988
Children's Trust was an improper effort to
deny the minority stockholders' rights. Hall
argues that his actions were valid and
designed to comply with the terms of the May
certificate of incorporation. This Court
will not tolerate "the wrongful subversion
of corporate democracy." Giuricich v. Emtrol
Corp., Del.Supr., 449 A.2d 232, 239 (1982).
Young v. Valhi, Inc., Del. Ch., 382 A.2d
1372 (1978). Therefore, we now examine
the transfer which resulted in the reduction
of Hall's stock holdings.
At the time when the May Board
first approved the merger, November 30,
1987, Hall did, in fact, own more than 30%
of May's outstanding voting stock. Hall
transferred 27% of the May stock, previously
controlled by him, to the Hall 1988
Children's Trust. This trust is irrevocable
10 and vests
absolute power to control the investment of
its securities and any voting rights
associated therewith, in co-trustees. The
trustees are a Dallas rabbi and a Florida
attorney selected by Hall.
Emerald challenges their
"independence".
11
However, the co-trustees of the trust are
imbued with fiduciary duties to act in favor
of the cestui que trusts. The co-trustees
would have the duty to vote in opposition to
the merger, if in their view the merger were
adverse to the interests of the cestui que
trusts. There is no evidence in the record
to suggest any agreement, or arrangement or
understanding, between the co-trustees and
Hall or the Hall corporations with respect
to voting on the proposed merger, and there
is no legal basis to assume that the
co-trustees would act contrary to their
fiduciary duties.
Kaufman v. Belmont, Del. Ch., 479 A.2d 282,
287 (1984) (court will not assume that a
director designated by dominant stockholder
will fail to perform his fiduciary duties).
We find that Hall's conveyance to
the Hall 1988 Children's Trust effectively
divested him of any ownership and control of
those shares and reduced his ownership and
control to 25% of the May stock.
Sundlun v. Executive Jet Aviation, Inc.,
Del. Ch.,
273 A.2d 282 (1970). At the
time the stockholders voted on the proposed
merger, March 11, 1988, Hall's interest in
May remained unchanged at 25%. At the time
the merger was put to the stockholders for a
vote, Hall, who no longer owned a majority
interest in May, was without the power or
the ability to force the merger upon the
stockholders. The stockholders had the
ability, if they so desired, to prevent the
consummation of the merger.
The record indicates that a
majority of the outstanding stock of the
corporation was voted in favor of the merger
with the Hall corporations. Since the
supermajority vote provision did not apply,
all that was necessary to ratify the merger
proposal was the affirmative vote of a
simple majority of the stockholders. See, 8
Del.C. § 251(c) (Supp.1988). The decision of
the Court of Chancery enjoining the merger,
Page 491 due to an absence of an affirmative
supermajority vote, is REVERSED.
Quorum/Voting Power Distinguished
We have concluded that there was
no merger with an Acquiring Entity and,
therefore, that Article Fourteenth was
completely inapplicable. However, we shall
now assume, arguendo, that Proposal One
involved a Business Combination with an
Acquiring Entity, i.e., the Hall
corporations, as affiliates of a 30%
stockholder.
Pursuant to Article Fourteenth,
there are two voting requirements that must
be satisfied for a Business Combination with
an Acquiring Entity, such as the merger, to
gain approval. First, there must be the
"presence in person or by proxy of the
holders of not less than 80% of the voting
securities of the Corporation" (i.e., an 80%
quorum) (emphasis added). Second, the
Business Combination must be approved by the
"affirmative vote of 66- 1/2% of the voting
power present, in person or by proxy, at
such meeting, excluding all voting
securities owned beneficially, directly or
indirectly, by the Acquiring Entity"
(emphasis added). Specifically, the
supermajority language of Article Fourteenth
establishing the quorum and voting
requirements in such a situation provides:
The presence in person or by proxy of the
holders of not less than 80% of the voting
securities of the Corporation shall be
required to constitute a quorum at any such
meeting. The affirmative vote of 66- 2/3% of
the voting power present, in person or by
proxy, at such meeting, excluding all voting
securities owned beneficially, directly or
indirectly, by the Acquiring Entity [30% or
more stockholder], shall be required for
approval of any such Business Combination.
The February 16, 1988, Proxy
Statement and Notice of the March 11, 1988,
Special Meeting of Stockholders sought
stockholder approval for two different
proposals: (a) the approval and adoption of
the merger agreement between May and the
Hall corporations ("Proposal One"), and (b)
the amendment of May's certificate of
incorporation to increase the authorized
number of May common shares to 100 million
("Proposal Two").
The record indicates that
14,655,660 shares were entitled to vote at
the special meeting of the stockholders, as
of the record date. Of the 14,655,660 shares
entitled to vote, 11,834,661 shares were
represented at the meeting in person or by
proxy, and were all counted as present for
the purpose of establishing a quorum
(80.8%). Hall controlled 3,675,359 of the
shares represented at the meeting. Emerald
did not attend the special meeting in person
or by proxy.
The Certificate of Judges of
Voting reflects that the power to vote on
Proposal One was withheld on 1,329,958
shares. The inspectors of election at the
stockholders meeting counted 10,513,703
(11,843,661 minus 1,329,958) shares as
voting power on Proposal One, with 9,934,172
of these shares voted in favor of the
proposed merger, 432,796 opposed, and
146,735 abstained.
12
On Proposal Two, all 11,834,661 shares
represented voted, with 11,151,902 shares
voted in the affirmative, 485,912 voted
against, and 161,747 abstained. Although the
report of the inspectors of election is
ministerial, it is presumed to be correct.
Atterbury v. Consolidated Coppermines Corp.,
Del. Ch., 20 A.2d 743 (1941); Cf.
Williams v. Sterling Oil of Oklahoma, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 273 A.2d 264 (1971). However,
when the question is whether there was a
quorum at the meeting, a court may inquire
into the actual facts.
Atterbury v. Consolidated Coppermines Corp.,
20 A.2d at 748.
The appellants argue that the
inspectors of election were correct in
deciding that there was a quorum consisting
of 11,843,661 shares present in person or by
proxy at the meeting. The appellants also
argue that the inspectors of election were
correct in deciding that only 10,513,703
shares represented had voting power with
respect to
Page 492 Proposal One (the merger). Thus, the
appellants argue that the voting judges
properly used the larger number to determine
whether or not the quorum requirements of
Article Fourteenth had been met, and the
smaller number to determine if the 66- 2/3%
voting power requirement of Article
Fourteenth had been satisfied.
The Court of Chancery concluded
that there was no basis for combining the
stockholders entitled to vote on both
proposals for the purpose of determining a
quorum and then separating the two proposals
for the purpose of determining the amount of
"voting power present ... at such meeting."
The Court of Chancery held that "[e]ither
there were only 10,513,703 shares present,
and therefore, no 80% quorum, or there were
11,843,661 shares present and therefore, no
66- 2/3% supermajority vote. In either case,
the vote is invalid and the proposed merger
may not be approved." Emerald Partners v.
Berlin, Del. Ch., C.A. No. 9700, Hartnett,
V.C., slip op. at 19 (March 18, 1988). We
disagree.
The supermajority provision of
Article Fourteenth addresses two different
matters, i.e., what constitutes a quorum for
meeting purposes and what constitutes the
required vote on the particular Business
Combination being proposed. The language of
the May certificate of incorporation
distinguishes between the presence of voting
securities and "voting power present". The
quorum requirement under Article Fourteenth
of May's certificate of incorporation is
that not less than 80% of the voting
securities of the corporation be present in
person or in proxy. If a quorum is present,
in order for the Business Combination to be
approved, Article Fourteenth requires the
"affirmative vote of 66- 2/3% of the voting
power present, in person or by proxy." If a
stockholder is not present in person, and if
he has not given a proxy to vote on the
proposed Business Combination, his stock
cannot be regarded as "voting power
present," for purposes of the vote required
under the supermajority provision. The
distinction set forth in the May certificate
of incorporation is recognized and permitted
under Delaware law.
Section 216 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law expressly
contemplates that the number of shares
"counted" for quorum purposes need not
necessarily be the same as the number of
shares required to be "present" for voting
purposes. Section 216 provides in relevant
part:
Subject to this chapter in
respect of the vote that shall be required
for a specified action, the certificate of
incorporation or bylaws of any corporation
authorized to issue stock may specify the
number of shares and/or the amount of other
securities having voting power the holders
of which shall be present or represented by
proxy at any meeting in order to constitute
a quorum for, and the votes that shall be
necessary for, the transaction of any
business, but in no event shall a quorum
consist of less than one-third of the shares
entitled to vote at the meeting.
8 Del.C. § 216 (Supp.1988)
(emphasis added). Moreover, the succeeding
sentence of Section 216 states:
In the absence of such
specification in the certificate of
incorporation or bylaws of the corporation:
(1) A majority of the shares
entitled to vote, present in person or
represented by proxy, shall constitute a
quorum at a meeting of stockholders;
(2) In all matters other than the
election of directors, the affirmative vote
of the majority of shares present in person
or represented by proxy at the meeting and
entitled to vote on the subject matter shall
be the act of the stockholders;.... Id.
(emphasis added). Section 216 evidences both
a legislative recognition of and an
authorization for corporations to
differentiate between the greater "universe"
of voting shares which are necessary to
satisfy a quorum requirement and the
"universe" of shares present in person or by
proxy "entitled to vote on the subject
matter." 8 Del.C. § 216; Providence and
Worcester Co. v. Baker, Del.Supr.,
378 A.2d 121 (1977); see also, 1, E. Folk, R. Ward &
E. Welch, Folk on the Delaware General
Corporation
Page 493 Law, § 216.1-.3 (2d ed. 1988). The
recognition of these different "universes"
is a corollary to a stockholders right not
to attend a meeting, his right not to vote
on any matter, even if he is in attendance,
and his right to be represented by a general
or a limited proxy.
Under Delaware law, a stockholder
has no obligation to attend a meeting.
In re Pioneer Drilling Co., Del. Ch.,
130 A.2d 559 (1957). However, it is also
firmly established that stockholders who are
present at a meeting are properly counted in
the determination of a quorum even though
the shares are not voted.
Duffy v. Loft, Inc., Del. Ch., 151 A. 223,
aff'd, Del.Supr., 152 A. 849 (1930).
Leamy v. Sinaloa Exploration & Development
Co., Del. Ch., 130 A. 282 (1925). A
stockholder can be present for quorum
purposes and yet not vote, because a
stockholder has a right to attend the
meeting but has "no legal duty to vote at
all." Ringling Bros.-Barnum & Bailey
Combined Shows, Inc. v. Ringling, Del.Supr.,
53 A.2d 441, 447 (1947). It follows
logically that a stockholder who is present
in person at a meeting has a right to
withhold his vote on any particular proposal
and, in fact, can leave the meeting.
However, a stockholder who is counted in
reaching a quorum, cannot defeat the quorum,
once established, by not voting or by
walking out of the meeting. Duffy v. Loft,
Inc., Del.Supr., 152 A. 849, 853 (1930).
13
A stockholder also has the right
to be represented at a meeting by giving a
general or a limited proxy. 8 Del.C. § 212.
"[T]he presence of holders of proxies at a
meeting renders the shares that they
represent present for purposes of a quorum,
regardless of whether the written proxies
are produced." 1, R.F. Balotti & J.
Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of
Corporations and Business Organizations §
7.15 at 361 (citing
Atterbury v. Consolidated Coppermines Corp.,
Del. Ch., 20 A.2d 743 (1941);
Hexter v. Columbia Baking Co., Del. Ch., 145
A. 115 (1929);
Hauth v. Giant Portland Cement Co., Del.
Ch., 96 A.2d 233 (1953)). See also,
Duffy v. Loft, Inc., 152 A. at 852-53.
Just as the quorum once established, will
not be defeated by a stockholder who
participates in part of the meeting but does
not vote or leaves the meeting, it also will
not be defeated merely because the
stockholder who is present by proxy did not
provide authority for his representative to
vote on all proposals.
Duffy v. Loft, Inc., 151 A. at 226-28.
Nevertheless, a stockholder who
is present by proxy for quorum purposes may
not be voting power present for all
purposes. Voting power present is synonomous
with the number of shares represented which
are "entitled to vote on the subject
matter." 8 Del.C. § 216(2) (Supp.1988). A
stockholder who is present in person or
represented at a meeting by a general proxy,
is present for quorum purposes and is also
voting power present on all matters.
However, if the stockholder is represented
by a limited proxy and does not empower its
holder to vote on a particular proposal,
then the shares represented by that proxy
cannot be considered as part of the voting
power present with respect to that proposal.
Therefore, unless the certificate
of incorporation provides to the contrary,
the legal and practical effect of executing
a limited proxy is that a stockholder will
contribute to the establishment of a quorum
and will be bound by a majority decision of
the voting power present on a proposal from
which he has withheld the authority to vote.
8 Del.C. §§ 212, 216 (1983 &
Page 494 Supp.1988). That choice is for each
stockholder to make. In making that choice,
each stockholder must evaluate the
advantages and disadvantages of a limited
proxy.
That choice is often made, and
its practical effects are frequently seen,
when a stockholder decides that it is not
convenient to be the "holder of record" of
his own stock. See 8 Del.C. § 262 (1983 &
Supp.1988). Shares of publicly traded
corporations are often held in the name of
brokers or fiduciaries (commonly called
"street name") for the account of the
beneficial owners. The brokers or
fiduciaries are the stockholders of record.
Delaware law expressly recognizes
the right of the corporation to rely upon
record ownership, not beneficial ownership,
in determining who is entitled to notice of
and to vote at the meetings of stockholders.
See, 8 Del.C. § 213(a) (Supp.1988); Enstar
Corp. v. Senouf, Del.Supr., 535 A.2d 1351,
1356 (1987). "[I]n dealing with its
stockholders a Delaware corporation need not
look beyond the registered owners." Williams
v. Sterling Oil of Oklahoma, Inc., Del. Ch.
267 A.2d 630, 634 (1970), rev'd on other
grounds, Del.Supr., 273 A.2d 264 (1971).
Therefore, from the perspective of the
Delaware corporation, a broker who is the
stockholder of record, has the legal
authority to vote in person or by proxy on
all matters.
Nevertheless, the relationship
between a broker, who is the "record owner",
and the beneficial owner is governed by the
rules of the various stock exchanges.
14 American Hardware
Corp. v. Savage Arms Corp., Del.Supr.,
136 A.2d 690 (1957). In certain instances, the
brokers may vote the street name stock in
their own discretion. However, with respect
to other matters, such as the merger
proposal presented to the May stockholders,
the brokers must obtain specified
instructions from the beneficial owner
before the broker can vote, or give a proxy,
on these nondiscretionary matters.
15
These stock exchange rules
further provide that where a proxy form
contains both discretionary and
nondiscretionary proposals, the broker may
vote, or give a proxy to vote, in the
absence of instructions from the beneficial
owner if the broker physically crosses out
those portions where it does not have
discretion.
16
However, where a proposal is
nondiscretionary and the broker or fiduciary
record holder receives no instructions from
the beneficial owner, voting power on that
proposal has been withheld. The shares
represented by a limited proxy cannot be
considered as part of the voting power
present on a nondiscretionary proposal from
which power has been withheld by crossing it
out or otherwise.
We find that the inspectors of
election properly excluded the 1,329,958
shares, as to which voting power was
withheld on Proposal One (the merger), from
the "universe" of voting power present to
which the supermajority standard applied.
17 Cf.
Page 495 Fradkin v. Ernst,
571 F.Supp. 829, 840
(N.D.Ohio 1983);
Bank of New York Co. v. Irving Bank Corp.,
140 Misc.2d 508, 531 N.Y.S.2d 730
(N.Y.Sup.Ct.), aff'd, 533 N.Y.S.2d 411
(N.Y.A.D. 1 Dept.1988). We also find that
the inspectors of election were correct in
counting all voting securities which were
represented in person or by proxy at the
meeting as present for purposes of the
"greater universe" or the quorum requirement
set forth in Article Fourteenth.
Once a quorum was established,
Article Fourteenth provided that 66- 2/3% of
the voting power present (those entitled to
vote on the subject) had to vote
affirmatively to approve the merger.
Accordingly, we conclude that the quorum
requirement and the voting power provision
of Article Fourteenth were correctly applied
and were, in fact, satisfied in this case.
For this alternate reason, the decision of
the Court of Chancery to enjoin the merger
is REVERSED.
HORSEY, Justice, concurring in
part and dissenting in part:
I dissent from the majority's
ruling that the supermajority voting
requirement contained in Article Fourteenth
of May's charter did not apply to the
proposed merger with the Hall corporations.
However, I concur in that portion of the
Court's decision which finds that the
shareholder vote was sufficient to satisfy
the quorum requirement and the supermajority
voting requirement of Article Fourteenth.
Thus, I would affirm the Court of
Chancery's construction of May's charter's
supermajority provision; namely, that the
date for determining its application to the
beneficial owner of 30% or more of May's
voting securities is the date on which the
business combination proposed by such
controlling owner (Craig Hall) was approved
by May's board of directors and not the date
of submission of the merger agreement to the
stockholders for adoption or rejection,
pursuant to 8 Del.C. § 251. For a
supermajority provision such as Article
Fourteenth to be efficacious, it must be
found to become operable at the time of
board action, and thereafter to remain in
place until the procedures of Section 251
have been carried out.
Article Fourteenth provides that
a supermajority quorum and vote requirement
for shareholder approval applies to any of
the defined "Business Combinations"
involving a 30% or more shareholder unless
the board of directors "shall have
authorized" such combination "prior to the
time" that such person became a 30% holder
of May's voting securities (emphasis added).
On the date that May's board adopted and
approved, and thereby "authorized" the Hall
merger, Craig Hall not only owned 52% of
May's stock but stood on both sides of the
transaction by virtue of his 100% control of
the Hall corporations. Therefore, in my
view, under the plain language of Article
Fourteenth, its supermajority quorum and
vote requirement then attached.
Attachment at time of board
approval, rather than at time of shareholder
vote, also appears to be consistent with the
underlying purpose of May's board in
proposing Article Fourteenth to its
shareholders in its 1977 Proxy Statement.
That stated purpose was, as plaintiff notes,
the protection of minority stockholders from
business "transactions [that] are not
effected through arms-length bargaining."
Since the terms and conditions of a
corporate transaction are set by a board and
not by its stockholders, the relevant date
for triggering a supermajority provision
should be the date of board approval of the
business combination or transaction. The
raison d'etre for such a provision is, as
plaintiff argues, "the presumptive inability
of [a] board to conduct genuine, arms-length
negotiations with a controlling
stockholder."
The defendants themselves
originally adopted this construction of
Article Fourteenth as applied to this
transaction. In
Page 496 their proxy statement, issued February 16,
1988, defendants stated, "The transaction
was originally structured to comply with
Article Fourteenth's requirements; however,
Mr. Hall subsequently decided to seek to
obviate the applicability of the
supermajority voting requirements of Article
Fourteenth by reducing his ... beneficial
ownership of May common stock below 30%."
The purpose of the special meeting of May's
stockholders was also stated to be "[t]o
consider and vote upon a proposal to adopt
an Amended and Restated Agreement and Plan
of Merger, dated November 30, 1987...."
Thus, November 30, 1987 was represented to
be the date that the plan of merger was
authorized by the May board. Hence, Article
Fourteenth by its terms attached since as of
that date, and well prior thereto, Craig
Hall's holdings of May well exceeded 50% of
May's outstanding stock.
While a merger is not completed
unless approved by the stockholders, the
majority's initialruling may be construed as
permitting a controlling shareholder to
influence, if not dominate, a corporate
transaction and thereafter reduce his
shareholdings to avoid the requirement of a
supermajority vote to ratify. That did not
happen in this case, but the precedent will
be available for its application in a future
case. I fear the Court's decision will send
the wrong signal that a supermajority voting
provision adopted by shareholders may be
avoided by an act of divestment of shares
after the controlling shareholder has
exercised his dominance to secure board
approval of a transaction.
One standard should apply to
manipulative conduct affecting corporate
governance, whether practiced by a
controlling insider or an outsider bent on a
takeover. Such conduct should not be
acquiesced in, especially where the
controlling shareholder times his divestment
of shares to "turn off" the supermajority
voting requirement to follow, not precede,
his exercise of dominance to secure board
approval of the transaction. The
supermajority vote protective device is
indisputably designed to provide
shareholders with a greater control over
corporate management decisions affecting the
investment interests of the minority or
non-management shareholders. This being a
class or derivative claim, the fact that
this plaintiff appears to have a motive of
self-interest in enforcing the supermajority
vote provision is irrelevant to the
determination of this significant legal
question. There are other minority
shareholder interests involved.
Finally, it should be noted that
this Court's Order of remand dated August
15, 1988 stated that "the parties to the
merger may proceed at their own risk." This
being an interlocutory appeal, there may
remain for determination by the trial court
several issues raised below but not decided,
including the fairness of the merger in
terms of price or exchange ratio and whether
the shareholder vote ratifying the merger
was fairly effected by stockholders who were
fully informed consistent with Michelson v.
Duncan, Del.Supr.,
407 A.2d 211 (1979).
1 Oral argument was originally heard
before a panel of this Court on May 13,
1988. This Court sua sponte ordered
rehearing en banc. Supr.Ct.R. 4(d).
2 This is a Dallas law firm, experienced
in corporate matters, which had never
represented either Hall or May.
3 The actual number of May's shares
controlled by the Koethers is not clear from
the record. On the date of the hearing,
Emerald owned 330,000 shares of May stock or
approximately 2.2% of May.
4 The term "greenmail" has been defined
as "the accumulation of a significant amount
of stock by a shareholder, or group of
shareholders acting in concert, for the
purpose of intimidating a board of directors
into causing the corporation to repurchase
such shares at a substantial premium over
their realistic market price." Good v.
Texaco, Inc., Del. Ch., C.A. No. 7501,
Brown, C., slip op. at 21 (Feb. 19, 1985).
5 At oral argument before this Court, the
appellants' attorney agreed that there was
no material change in the merger agreement
between the date of its approval by the May
Board, November 30, 1987, and the date the
Board reaffirmed it, February 13, 1988. The
only change was the reduction in ownership
of May stock by Hall. See, May Petroleum,
Inc., Proxy Statement/Prospectus at 64
(February 16, 1988) (disclosing transfer of
ownership of part of Hall's stock). For the
purpose of this opinion, we have assumed
that the May Board "approved" the merger on
November 30, 1987.
6 The proxy statement disclosed that
Hall's attorneys had provided a written
legal opinion that the supermajority
requirements of Article Fourteenth were no
longer applicable to the merger proposal.
The proxy statement also disclosed that the
May Board had been independently advised
that it could rely upon the legal opinion
rendered to Hall.
7 See, e.g., 3, R.F. Balotti & J.
Finkelstein, The Delaware Law of
Corporations and Business Organizations,
Form 1.15 at 23 ("at any time within two
years prior thereto was the beneficial
owner, directly or indirectly, of not less
than 10% of the then outstanding Voting
Shares.")
8 The approval of a merger, under the
Delaware General Corporation Law, requires
the affirmative vote of a majority of the
outstanding common stock of the corporations
unless the certificate of incorporation
provides for a higher percentage.
Supermajority vote provisions were
originally formulated as antitakeover
devices. By requiring a greater percentage
of stockholders to approve a proposed
corporate action, stockholders are given
more power to defeat actions adverse to
their interests. See 8 Del.C. § 251(c)
(Supp.1988). See also, Friedenberg, Jaws
III: The Impropriety of Shark-Repellent
Amendments as a Takeover Defense, 7 Del.J.
Corp. L. 32, 42-44 (1982); F.H. O'Neal & R.
Thompson, O'Neal's Oppression of Minority
Shareholders § 9.08 (2d ed. 1985).
9 The record date establishes those
stockholders who are eligible to vote. 8
Del.C. § 213 (Supp.1988). To the extent the
phrase "date of the stockholder vote" is
used in this opinion, it is inexorably tied
to the record date. Since the record date
precedes the meeting date, the requisite
vote which is needed is always ascertainable
in advance of the meeting.
10 Emerald's attorney reaffirmed this at
oral argument:
THE COURT: Well, do you concede that the
transfer to the trust is irrevocable?
THE ATTORNEY: Your Honor, I do not have
an argument that I can present to the Court
at this time that the trust shares can be
returned to Mr. Hall.
THE COURT: So you concede that point,
that the trust shares are irrevocably
transferred?
THE ATTORNEY: I concede that on the
present record there is nothing which would
indicate they are not. I am not prepared to
concede that point forever.
THE COURT: But certainly as we stand here
today you are conceding it for the purpose
of this record, is that right?
THE ATTORNEY: No question about it, yes,
sir.
THE COURT: It was a valid transfer.
THE ATTORNEY: I concede that point.
11 The trust provides that all of the
trust powers reside in the co-trustees.
Among other things, the trust provides that
"[n]o person, other than the [co-trustees],
acting in [their] fiduciary capacity, shall
have or exercise the power to vote or direct
the voting of any stock or other securities
of the trust, to control the investment of
the trust either by directing investments of
the trust or reinvestments, or to reacquire
or exchange any property of the trust by
submitting other property of an equivalent
value." Trust Agreement Article X(A). The
only right given the cestui que trusts (the
beneficiaries of the trust--Hall's children)
is the right to the specific distributions
provided for under the trust.
12 The Judges of Voting treated the
1,329,958 shares as to which voting power
was withheld on Proposal One as not voting.
13 In Duffy, the Chancellor determined
that certain proxy holders, who were present
at the beginning of a stockholders meeting
and whose shares were counted in reaching a
quorum, could not defeat the quorum, once
established, by walking out of the meeting.
Duffy v. Loft, Inc., 151 A. at 228. In
affirming, this Court said: "If the owners
of the stock, the principals, could not
break a quorum by withdrawing from the
meeting, certainly their agents could not do
it by withdrawing."
Duffy v. Loft, Inc., 152 A. at 853. See
also,
Atterbury v. Consolidated Coppermines Corp.,
20 A.2d at 749; W. Fletcher, Cyclopedia
of the Law of Private Corporations § 2013.1
at 106 (rev. perm. ed. 1987) ("Where a
quorum is once present to organize a
shareholders' meeting, it is generally not
broken by the subsequent withdrawal of a
part or faction of the shareholders, whether
present in person or by their proxies....").
14 Both the New York Stock Exchange and
the American Stock Exchange require member
organizations who have received soliciting
materials to take certain actions with
respect to voting instructions from the
beneficial owner of the stock held in
"street name." 2 N.Y.S.E. Guide (CCH) pp
2451-2452; 2 Am. Stock Ex. Guide (CCH) pp
9528-9529. Cf. NASD Rules of Fair Practice,
Art. III, § 1, Interpretation .05, Section
4, NASD Manual (CCH) p 2151.05 at 2038. See
also Enstar Corp. v. Senouf, Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1351 (1987).
15 For example, New York Stock Exchange
Rule 452.11 provides in pertinent part:
Generally speaking, a member organization
may not give a proxy to vote without
instructions from beneficial owners when the
matter to be voted upon: ... (3) relates to
a merger...."
2 N.Y.S.E. Guide (CCH) p 2452.11
supplementary material at 3809-11; see also,
2 Am. Stock Ex. Guide (CCH) p 9529.11
commentary at 2721-23.
16 See, e.g., 2 N.Y.S.E. Guide (CCH) p
2452.12 supplementary material at 3811 ("the
member organization may vote the proxy in
the absence of instructions if it physically
crosses out those portions where it does not
have discretion.").
17 Emerald argues that Proposal Two was
also nondiscretionary and, therefore, could
not be voted on by a broker who was the
record holder without instructions from the
beneficial owner. If the stockholder of
record was a broker, and the broker cast a
vote on Proposal Two, the corporation was
not required to look beyond the registered
owner. "The corporation ought not to be
involved in possible misunderstandings or
clashes of opinion between the
non-registered and registered holder of
shares. It may rightfully look to the
corporate books as the sole evidence of
membership." Salt Dome Oil Corp. v. Schenck,
Del.Supr., 41 A.2d 583, 589 (1945). This
principle was reaffirmed
Enstar Corp. v. Senouf, 535 A.2d at 1356. |