| Page 651 564 A.2d 651  Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 93,965
BLASIUS INDUSTRIES, INC., William B.
Conner, Warren Delano,
Jr., Harold H. George, Harold E. Hall,
Michael A.
Lubin, Arnold W. MacAlonan, Thomas J.
Murnick, and William P.
Shulevitz, Plaintiffs,
v.
ATLAS CORPORATION, John J. Dwyer, Edward R.
Farley, Jr.,
Michael Bongiovanni, Richard R. Weaver,
Walter G. Clinchy,
Andrew Davlin, Jr., Edgar M. Masinter, John
M. Devaney and
Harry J. Winters, Jr., Defendants.
Civ. A. No. 9720. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: June 6, 1988.
Decided: July 25, 1988.
Page 652
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, and
Michael Houghton of Morris, Nichols, Arsht &
Tunnell, Wilmington, and Greg A. Danilow, M.
Nicole Marcey, and Meric Craig Bloch, of
Weil, Gotshal & Manges, and Linda C.
Goldstein of Kramer, Levin, Nessen, Kamin &
Frankel, New York City, for plaintiffs.
Charles F. Richards, Jr., Samuel
A. Nolan, and Cynthia D. Kaiser of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, and Kenneth R.
Logan, Joseph F. Tringali, David A.
Martland, and Brad N. Friedman of Simpson
Thacher & Bartlett, New York City, for
defendants.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
Two cases pitting the directors
of Atlas Corporation against that company's
largest (9.1%) shareholder, Blasius
Industries, have been consolidated and tried
together. Together, these cases ultimately
require the court to determine who is
entitled to sit on Atlas' board of
directors. Each, however, presents discrete
and important legal issues.
The first of the cases was filed
on December 30, 1987. As amended, it
challenges the validity of board action
taken at a telephone meeting of December 31,
1987 that added two new members to Atlas'
seven member board. That action was taken as
an immediate response to the delivery to
Atlas by Blasius the previous day of a form
of stockholder consent that, if joined in by
holders of a majority of Atlas' stock, would
have increased the board of Atlas from seven
to fifteen members and would have elected
eight new members nominated by Blasius.
As I find the facts of this first
case, they present the question whether a
board acts consistently with its fiduciary
duty when it acts, in good faith and with
appropriate care, for the primary purpose of
preventing or impeding an unaffiliated
majority of shareholders from expanding the
board and electing a new majority. For the
reasons that follow, I conclude that, even
though defendants here acted on their view
of the corporation's interest and not
selfishly, their December 31 action
constituted an offense to the relationship
between corporate directors and shareholders
that has traditionally been protected in
courts of equity. As a consequence, I
conclude that the board action taken on
December 31 was invalid and must be voided.
The basis for this opinion is set forth at
pages 658-663 below.
The second filed action was
commenced on March 9, 1988. It arises out of
the consent solicitation itself (or an
amended
Page 653 version of it) and requires the court to
determine the outcome of Blasius' consent
solicitation, which was warmly and actively
contested on both sides. The vote was, on
either view of the facts and law, extremely
close. For the reasons set forth at pages
663-670 below, I conclude that the judges of
election properly confined their count to
the written "ballots" (so to speak) before
them; that on that basis, they made several
errors, but that correction of those errors
does not reverse the result they announced.
I therefore conclude that plaintiffs'
consent solicitation failed to garner the
support of a majority of Atlas shares.
The facts set forth below
represent findings based upon a
preponderance of the admissible evidence, as
I evaluate it.
I.
Blasius Acquires a 9% Stake in Atlas.
Blasius is a new stockholder of
Atlas. It began to accumulate Atlas shares
for the first time in July, 1987. On October
29, it filed a Schedule 13D with the
Securities Exchange Commission disclosing
that, with affiliates, it then owed 9.1% of
Atlas' common stock. It stated in that
filing that it intended to encourage
management of Atlas to consider a
restructuring of the Company or other
transaction to enhance shareholder values.
It also disclosed that Blasius was exploring
the feasibility of obtaining control of
Atlas, including instituting a tender offer
or seeking "appropriate" representation on
the Atlas board of directors.
Blasius has recently come under
the control of two individuals, Michael
Lubin and Warren Delano, who after
experience in the commercial banking
industry, had, for a short time, run a
venture capital operation for a small
investment banking firm. Now on their own,
they apparently came to control Blasius with
the assistance of Drexel Burnham's well
noted junk bond mechanism. Since then, they
have made several attempts to effect
leveraged buyouts, but without success.
In May, 1987, with Drexel Burnham
serving as underwriter, Lubin and Delano
caused Blasius to raise $60 million through
the sale of junk bonds. A portion of these
funds were used to acquire a 9% position in
Atlas. According to its public filings with
the SEC, Blasius' debt service obligations
arising out of the sale of the junk bonds
are such that it is unable to service those
obligations from its income from operations.
The prospect of Messrs. Lubin and
Delano involving themselves in Atlas'
affairs, was not a development welcomed by
Atlas' management. Atlas had a new CEO,
defendant Weaver, who had, over the course
of the past year or so, overseen a business
restructuring of a sort. Atlas had sold
three of its five divisions. It had just
announced (September 1, 1987) that it would
close its once important domestic uranium
operation. The goal was to focus the Company
on its gold mining business. By October,
1987, the structural changes to do this had
been largely accomplished. Mr. Weaver was
perhaps thinking that the restructuring that
had occurred should be given a chance to
produce benefit before another restructuring
(such as Blasius had alluded to in its
Schedule 13D filing) was attempted, when he
wrote in his diary on October 30, 1987:
13D by Delano & Lubin came in today. Had
long conversation w/MAH & Mark Golden [of
Goldman, Sachs] on issue. All agree we must
dilute these people down by the acquisition
of another Co. w/stock, or merger or
something else.
The Blasius Proposal of A Leverage
Recapitalization Or Sale.
Immediately after filing its 13D
on October 29, Blasius' representatives
sought a meeting with the Atlas management.
Atlas dragged its feet. A meeting was
arranged for December 2, 1987 following the
regular meeting of the Atlas board.
Attending that meeting were Messrs. Lubin
and Delano for Blasius, and, for Atlas,
Messrs. Weaver, Devaney (Atlas' CFO),
Masinter (legal counsel and director) and
Czajkowski (a representative of Atlas'
investment banker, Goldman Sachs).
Page 654
At that meeting, Messrs. Lubin
and Delano suggested that Atlas engage in a
leveraged restructuring and distribute cash
to shareholders. In such a transaction,
which is by this date a commonplace form of
transaction, a corporation typically raises
cash by sale of assets and significant
borrowings and makes a large one time cash
distribution to shareholders. The
shareholders are typically left with cash
and an equity interest in a smaller, more
highly leveraged enterprise. Lubin and
Delano gave the outline of a leveraged
recapitalization for Atlas as they saw it.
Immediately following the
meeting, the Atlas representatives expressed
among themselves an initial reaction that
the proposal was infeasible. On December 7,
Mr. Lubin sent a letter detailing the
proposal. In general, it proposed the
following: (1) an initial special cash
dividend to Atlas' stockholders in an
aggregate amount equal to (a) $35 million,
(b) the aggregate proceeds to Atlas from the
exercise of option warrants and stock
options, and (c) the proceeds from the sale
or disposal of all of Atlas' operations that
are not related to its continuing minerals
operations; and (2) a special non-cash
dividend to Atlas' stockholders of an
aggregate $125 million principal amount of
7% Secured Subordinated Gold-Indexed
Debentures. The funds necessary to pay the
initial cash dividend were to principally
come from (i) a "gold loan" in the amount of
$35,625,000, repayable over a three to five
year period and secured by 75,000 ounces of
gold at a price of $475 per ounce, (ii) the
proceeds from the sale of the discontinued
Brockton Sole and Plastics and Ready-Mix
Concrete businesses, and (iii) a then
expected January, 1988 sale of uranium to
the Public Service Electric & Gas Company.
(DX H.)
Atlas Asks Its Investment Banker to Study
the Proposal.
This written proposal was
distributed to the Atlas board on December 9
and Goldman Sachs was directed to review and
analyze it.
The proposal met with a cool
reception from management. On December 9,
Mr. Weaver issued a press release expressing
surprise that Blasius would suggest using
debt to accomplish what he characterized as
a substantial liquidation of Atlas at a time
when Atlas' future prospects were promising.
He noted that the Blasius proposal
recommended that Atlas incur a high debt
burden in order to pay a substantial one
time dividend consisting of $35 million in
cash and $125 million in subordinated
debentures. Mr. Weaver also questioned the
wisdom of incurring an enormous debt burden
amidst the uncertainty in the financial
markets that existed in the aftermath of the
October crash.
Blasius attempted on December 14
and December 22 to arrange a further meeting
with the Atlas management without success.
During this period, Atlas provided Goldman
Sachs with projections for the Company.
Lubin was told that a further meeting would
await completion of Goldman's analysis. A
meeting after the first of the year was
proposed.
The Delivery of Blasius' Consent
Statement.
On December 30, 1987, Blasius
caused Cede & Co. (the registered owner of
its Atlas stock) to deliver to Atlas a
signed written consent (1) adopting a
precatory resolution recommending that the
board develop and implement a restructuring
proposal, (2) amending the Atlas bylaws to,
among other things, expand the size of the
board from seven to fifteen members--the
maximum number under Atlas' charter, and (3)
electing eight named persons to fill the new
directorships. Blasius also filed suit that
day in this court seeking a declaration that
certain bylaws adopted by the board on
September 1, 1987 acted as an unlawful
restraint on the shareholders' right,
created by Section 228 of our corporation
statute, to act through consent without
undergoing a meeting.
The reaction was immediate. Mr.
Weaver conferred with Mr. Masinter, the
Company's outside counsel and a director,
who viewed the consent as an attempt to take
control of the Company. They decided to call
an emergency meeting of the board, even
though a regularly scheduled meeting was to
occur only one week hence, on January
Page 655
6, 1988. The point of the emergency meeting
was to act on their conclusion (or to seek
to have the board act on their conclusion)
"that we should add at least one and
probably two directors to the board ..."
(Tr. 85, Vol. II). A quorum of directors,
however, could not be arranged for a
telephone meeting that day. A telephone
meeting was held the next day. At that
meeting, the board voted to amend the bylaws
to increase the size of the board from seven
to nine and appointed John M. Devaney and
Harry J. Winters, Jr. to fill those newly
created positions. Atlas' Certificate of
Incorporation creates staggered terms for
directors; the terms to which Messrs.
Devaney and Winters were appointed would
expire in 1988 and 1990, respectively.
The Motivation of the Incumbent Board In
Expanding the Board and Appointing New
Members.
In increasing the size of Atlas'
board by two and filling the newly created
positions, the members of the board realized
that they were thereby precluding the
holders of a majority of the Company's
shares from placing a majority of new
directors on the board through Blasius'
consent solicitation, should they want to do
so. Indeed the evidence establishes that
that was the principal motivation in so
acting.
The conclusion that, in creating
two new board positions on December 31 and
electing Messrs. Devaney and Winters to fill
those positions the board was principally
motivated to prevent or delay the
shareholders from possibly placing a
majority of new members on the board, is
critical to my analysis of the central issue
posed by the first filed of the two pending
cases. If the board in fact was not so
motivated, but rather had taken action
completely independently of the consent
solicitation, which merely had an incidental
impact upon the possible effectuation of any
action authorized by the shareholders, it is
very unlikely that such action would be
subject to judicial nullification. See,
e.g., Frantz Manufacturing Company v. EAC
Industries, Del.Supr., 501 A.2d 401, 407
(1985); Moran v. Household International,
Inc., Del.Ch., 490 A.2d 1059, 1080, aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985). The board,
as a general matter, is under no fiduciary
obligation to suspend its active management
of the firm while the consent solicitation
process goes forward.
There is testimony in the record
to support the proposition that, in acting
on December 31, the board was principally
motivated simply to implement a plan to
expand the Atlas board that preexisted the
September, 1987 emergence of Blasius as an
active shareholder. I have no doubt that the
addition of Mr. Winters, an expert in mining
economics, and Mr. Devaney, a financial
expert employed by the Company, strengthened
the Atlas board and, should anyone ever have
reason to review the wisdom of those
choices, they would be found to be sensible
and prudent. I cannot conclude, however,
that the strengthening of the board by the
addition of these men was the principal
motive for the December 31 action. As I view
this factual determination as critical, I
will pause to dilate briefly upon the
evidence that leads me to this conclusion.
The evidence indicates that CEO
Weaver was acquainted with Mr. Winters prior
to the time he assumed the presidency of
Atlas. When, in the fall of 1986, Mr. Weaver
learned of his selection as Atlas' future
CEO, he informally approached Mr. Winters
about serving on the board of the Company.
Winters indicated a willingness to do so and
sent to Mr. Weaver a copy of his curriculum
vitae. Weaver, however, took no action with
respect to this matter until he had some
informal discussion with other board members
on December 2, 1987, the date on which Mr.
Lubin orally presented Blasius'
restructuring proposal to management. At
that time, he mentioned the possibility to
other board members.
Then, on December 7, Mr. Weaver
called Mr. Winters on the telephone and
asked him if he would serve on the board and
Mr. Winters again agreed.
On December 24, 1987, Mr. Weaver
wrote to other board members, sending them
Mr. Winters curriculum vitae and notifying
them that Mr. Winters would be
Page 656 proposed for board membership at the
forthcoming January 6 meeting. It was also
suggested that a dinner meeting be scheduled
for January 5, in order to give board
members who did not know Mr. Winters an
opportunity to meet him prior to acting on
that suggestion. The addition of Mr. Devaney
to the board was not mentioned in that memo,
nor, so far as the record discloses, was it
discussed at the December 2 board meeting.
It is difficult to consider the
timing of the activation of the interest in
adding Mr. Winters to the board in December
as simply coincidental with the pressure
that Blasius was applying. The connection
between the two events, however, becomes
unmistakably clear when the later events of
December 30 and 31 are focused upon. As
noted above, on the 30th, Atlas received the
Blasius consent which proposed to
shareholders that they expand the board from
seven to fifteen and add eight new members
identified in the consent. It also proposed
the adoption of a precatory resolution
encouraging restructuring or sale of the
Company. Mr. Weaver immediately met with Mr.
Masinter. In addition to receiving the
consent, Atlas was informed it had been sued
in this court, but it did not yet know the
thrust of that action. At that time, Messrs.
Weaver and Masinter "discussed a lot of
[reactive] strategies and Edgar [Masinter]
told me we really got to put a program
together to go forward with this consent....
we talked about taking no action. We talked
about adding one board member. We talked
about adding two board members. We talked
about adding eight board members. And we did
a lot of looking at other and various and
sundry alternatives...." (Weaver Testimony,
Tr. I, p. 130). They decided to add two
board members and to hold an emergency board
meeting that very day to do so. It is clear
that the reason that Mr. Masinter advised
taking this step immediately rather than
waiting for the January 6 meeting was that
he feared that the Court of Chancery might
issue a temporary restraining order
prohibiting the board from increasing its
membership, since the consent solicitation
had commenced. It is admitted that there was
no fear that Blasius would be in a position
to complete a public solicitation for
consents prior to the January 6 board
meeting.
In this setting, I conclude that,
while the addition of these qualified men
would, under other circumstances, be clearly
appropriate as an independent step, such a
step was in fact taken in order to impede or
preclude a majority of the shareholders from
effectively adopting the course proposed by
Blasius. Indeed, while defendants never
forsake the factual argument that that
action was simply a continuation of business
as usual, they, in effect, admit from time
to time this overriding purpose. For
example, everyone concedes that the
directors understood on December 31 that the
effect of adding two directors would be to
preclude stockholders from effectively
implementing the Blasius proposal. Mr.
Weaver, for example, testifies as follows:
Q: Was it your view that by electing
these two directors, Atlas was preventing
Blasius from electing a majority of the
board?
A: I think that is a component of my
total overview. I think in the short term,
yes, it did.
Directors Farley and Bongiovanni
admit that the board acted to slow the
Blasius proposal down. See Tr. T, Vol. I, at
pp. 23-24 and 81.
This candor is praiseworthy, but
any other statement would be frankly
incredible. The timing of these events is,
in my opinion, consistent only with the
conclusion that Mr. Weaver and Mr. Masinter
originated, and the board immediately
endorsed, the notion of adding these
competent, friendly individuals to the
board, not because the board felt an urgent
need to get them on the board immediately
for reasons relating to the operations of
Atlas' business, but because to do so would,
for the moment, preclude a majority of
shareholders from electing eight new board
members selected by Blasius. As explained
below, I conclude that, in so acting, the
board was not selfishly motivated simply to
retain power.
There was no discussion at the
December 31 meeting of the feasibility or
wisdom of the Blasius restructuring
proposal. While
Page 657 several of the directors had an initial
impression that the plan was not feasible
and, if implemented, would likely result in
the eventual liquidation of the Company,
they had not yet focused upon and acted on
that subject. Goldman Sachs had not yet made
its report, which was scheduled to be given
January 6.
The January 6 Rejection of the Blasius
Proposal.
On January 6, the board convened
for its scheduled meeting. At that time, it
heard a full report from its financial
advisor concerning the feasibility of the
Blasius restructuring proposal. The Goldman
Sachs presentation included a summary of
five year cumulative cash flows measured
against a base case and the Blasius
proposal, an analysis of Atlas' debt
repayment capacity under the Blasius
proposal, and pro forma income and cash flow
statements for a base case and the Blasius
proposal, assuming prices of $375, $475 and
$575 per ounce of gold.
After completing that
presentation, Goldman Sachs concluded with
its view that if Atlas implemented the
Blasius restructuring proposal (i) a severe
drain on operating cash flow would result,
(ii) Atlas would be unable to service its
long-term debt and could end up in
bankruptcy, (iii) the common stock of Atlas
would have little or no value, and (iv)
since Atlas would be unable to generate
sufficient cash to service its debt, the
debentures contemplated to be issued in the
proposed restructuring could have a value of
only 20% to 30% of their face amount.
Goldman Sachs also said that it knew of no
financial restructuring that had been
undertaken by a company where the company
had no chance of repaying its debt, which,
in its judgment, would be Atlas' situation
if it implemented the Blasius restructuring
proposal. Finally, Goldman Sachs noted that
if Atlas made a meaningful commercial
discovery of gold after implementation of
the Blasius restructuring proposal, Atlas
would not have the resources to develop the
discovery.
The board then voted to reject
the Blasius proposal. Blasius was informed
of that action. The next day, Blasius caused
a second, modified consent to be delivered
to Atlas. A contest then ensued between the
Company and Blasius for the votes of Atlas'
shareholders. The facts relating to that
contest, and a determination of its outcome,
form the subject of the second filed lawsuit
to be now decided. That matter, however,
will be deferred for the moment as the facts
set forth above are sufficient to frame and
decide the principal remaining issue raised
by the first filed action: whether the
December 31 board action, in increasing the
board by two and appointing members to fill
those new positions, constituted, in the
circumstances, an inequitable interference
with the exercise of shareholder rights.
II.
Plaintiff attacks the December 31
board action as a selfishly motivated effort
to protect the incumbent board from a
perceived threat to its control of Atlas.
Their conduct is said to constitute a
violation of the principle, applied in such
cases as Schnell v. Chris Craft Industries,
Del.Supr.,
285 A.2d 437 (1971), that
directors hold legal powers subjected to a
supervening duty to exercise such powers in
good faith pursuit of what they reasonably
believe to be in the corporation's interest.
The December 31 action is also said to have
been taken in a grossly negligent manner,
since it was designed to preclude the
recapitalization from being pursued, and the
board had no basis at that time to make a
prudent determination about the wisdom of
that proposal, nor was there any emergency
that required it to act in any respect
regarding that proposal before putting
itself in a position to do so advisedly.
Defendants, of course, contest
every aspect of plaintiffs' claims. They
claim the formidable protections of the
business judgment rule. See, e.g., Aronson
v. Lewis, Del.Supr.,
473 A.2d 805 (1983);
Grobow v. Perot, Del.Supr.,
539 A.2d 180
(1988); In re J.P. Stevens & Co., Inc.
Shareholders Litigation, Del.Ch.,
542 A.2d 770 (1988).
They say that, in creating two
new board positions and filling them on
December 31, they acted without a
conflicting interest
Page 658 (since the Blasius proposal did not, in any
event, challenge their places on the board),
they acted with due care (since they well
knew the persons they put on the board and
did not thereby preclude later consideration
of the recapitalization), and they acted in
good faith (since they were motivated, they
say, to protect the shareholders from the
threat of having an impractical, indeed a
dangerous, recapitalization program foisted
upon them). Accordingly, defendants assert
there is no basis to conclude that their
December 31 action constituted any violation
of the duty of the fidelity that a director
owes by reason of his office to the
corporation and its shareholders.
Moreover, defendants say that
their action was fair, measured and
appropriate, in light of the circumstances.
Therefore, even should the court conclude
that some level of substantive review of it
is appropriate under a legal test of
fairness, or under the intermediate level of
review authorized by Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946
(1985), defendants assert that the board's
decision must be sustained as valid in both
law and equity.
III.
One of the principal thrusts of
plaintiffs' argument is that, in acting to
appoint two additional persons of their own
selection, including an officer of the
Company, to the board, defendants were
motivated not by any view that Atlas'
interest (or those of its shareholders)
required that action, but rather they were
motivated improperly, by selfish concern to
maintain their collective control over the
Company. That is, plaintiffs say that the
evidence shows there was no policy dispute
or issue that really motivated this action,
but that asserted policy differences were
pretexts for entrenchment for selfish
reasons. If this were found to be factually
true, one would not need to inquire further.
The action taken would constitute a breach
of duty. Schnell v. Chris Craft Industries,
Del.Supr.,
285 A.2d 437 (1971); Guiricich v.
Emtrol Corp., Del.Supr.,
449 A.2d 232
(1982).
In support of this view,
plaintiffs point to the early diary entry of
Mr. Weaver (p. 653, supra ), to the lack of
any consideration at all of the Blasius
recapitalization proposal at the December 31
meeting, the lack of any substantial basis
for the outside directors to have had any
considered view on the subject by that
time--not having had any view from Goldman
Sachs nor seen the financial data that it
regarded as necessary to evaluate the
proposal--and upon what it urges is the
grievously flawed, slanted analysis that
Goldman Sachs finally did present.
While I am satisfied that the
evidence is powerful, indeed compelling,
that the board was chiefly motivated on
December 31 to forestall or preclude the
possibility that a majority of shareholders
might place on the Atlas board eight new
members sympathetic to the Blasius proposal,
it is less clear with respect to the more
subtle motivational question: whether the
existing members of the board did so because
they held a good faith belief that such
shareholder action would be self-injurious
and shareholders needed to be protected from
their own judgment.
On balance, I cannot conclude
that the board was acting out of a
self-interested motive in any important
respect on December 31. I conclude rather
that the board saw the "threat" of the
Blasius recapitalization proposal as posing
vital policy differences between itself and
Blasius. It acted, I conclude, in a good
faith effort to protect its incumbency, not
selfishly, but in order to thwart
implementation of the recapitalization that
it feared, reasonably, would cause great
injury to the Company.
The real question the case
presents, to my mind, is whether, in these
circumstances, the board, even if it is
acting with subjective good faith (which
will typically, if not always, be a
contestable or debatable judicial
conclusion), may validly act for the
principal purpose of preventing the
shareholders from electing a majority of new
directors. The question thus posed is not
one of intentional wrong (or even
negligence), but one of authority as between
the fiduciary and the beneficiary (not
simply
Page 659 legal authority, i.e., as between the
fiduciary and the world at large).
IV.
It is established in our law that
a board may take certain steps--such as the
purchase by the corporation of its own
stock--that have the effect of defeating a
threatened change in corporate control, when
those steps are taken advisedly, in good
faith pursuit of a corporate interest, and
are reasonable in relation to a threat to
legitimate corporate interests posed by the
proposed change in control. See Unocal Corp.
v. Mesa Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946 (1985); Kors v. Carey, Del.Ch.,
158 A.2d 136 (1960); Cheff v. Mathes, Del.Supr.,
199 A.2d 548 (1964); Kaplan v. Goldsamt,
Del.Ch.,
380 A.2d 556 (1977). Does this
rule--that the reasonable exercise of good
faith and due care generally validates, in
equity, the exercise of legal authority even
if the act has an entrenchment effect--apply
to action designed for the primary purpose
of interfering with the effectiveness of a
stockholder vote? Our authorities, as well
as sound principles, suggest that the
central importance of the franchise to the
scheme of corporate governance, requires
that, in this setting, that rule not be
applied and that closer scrutiny be accorded
to such transaction.
1. Why the deferential business
judgment rule does not apply to board acts
taken for the primary purpose of interfering
with a stockholder's vote, even if taken
advisedly and in good faith.
A. The question of legitimacy.
The shareholder franchise is the
ideological underpinning upon which the
legitimacy of directorial power rests.
Generally, shareholders have only two
protections against perceived inadequate
business performance. They may sell their
stock (which, if done in sufficient numbers,
may so affect security prices as to create
an incentive for altered managerial
performance), or they may vote to replace
incumbent board members.
It has, for a long time, been
conventional to dismiss the stockholder vote
as a vestige or ritual of little practical
importance.
1 It
may be that we are now witnessing the
emergence of new institutional voices and
arrangements that will make the stockholder
vote a less predictable affair than it has
been. Be that as it may, however, whether
the vote is seen functionally as an
unimportant formalism, or as an important
tool of discipline, it is clear that it is
critical to the theory that legitimates the
exercise of power by some (directors and
officers) over vast aggregations of property
that they do not own. Thus, when viewed from
a broad, institutional perspective, it can
be seen that matters involving the integrity
of the shareholder voting process involve
consideration not present in any other
context in which directors exercise
delegated power.
B. Questions of this type raise
issues of the allocation of authority as
between the board and the shareholders.
The distinctive nature of the
shareholder franchise context also appears
when the matter is viewed from a less
generalized, doctrinal point of view. From
this point of view, as well, it appears that
the ordinary considerations to which the
business judgment rule originally responded
are simply not present in the shareholder
voting context.
2
That is, a decision by the
Page 660 board to act for the primary purpose of
preventing the effectiveness of a
shareholder vote inevitably involves the
question who, as between the principal and
the agent, has authority with respect to a
matter of internal corporate governance.
That, of course, is true in a very specific
way in this case which deals with the
question who should constitute the board of
directors of the corporation, but it will be
true in every instance in which an incumbent
board seeks to thwart a shareholder
majority. A board's decision to act to
prevent the shareholders from creating a
majority of new board positions and filling
them does not involve the exercise of the
corporation's power over its property, or
with respect to its rights or obligations;
rather, it involves allocation, between
shareholders as a class and the board, of
effective power with respect to governance
of the corporation. This need not be the
case with respect to other forms of
corporate action that may have an
entrenchment effect--such as the stock
buybacks present in Unocal, Cheff or Kors v.
Carey. Action designed principally to
interfere with the effectiveness of a vote
inevitably involves a conflict between the
board and a shareholder majority. Judicial
review of such action involves a
determination of the legal and equitable
obligations of an agent towards his
principal. This is not, in my opinion, a
question that a court may leave to the agent
finally to decide so long as he does so
honestly and competently; that is, it may
not be left to the agent's business
judgment.
3
2. What rule does apply: per se
invalidity of corporate acts intended
primarily to thwart effective exercise of
the franchise or is there an intermediate
standard?
Plaintiff argues for a rule of
per se invalidity once a plaintiff has
established that a board has acted for the
primary purpose of thwarting the exercise of
a shareholder vote. Our opinions in Canada
Southern Oils, Ltd. v. Manabi Exploration
Co., Del.Ch.,
96 A.2d 810 (1953) and Condec
Corporation v. Lunkenheimer Company,
Del.Ch.,
230 A.2d 769 (1967) could be read
as support for such a rule of per se
invalidity. Condec is informative.
There, plaintiff had recently
closed a tender offer for 51% of defendants'
stock. It had announced no intention to do a
follow-up merger. The incumbent board had
earlier refused plaintiffs' offer to merge
and, in response to its tender offer, sought
alternative deals. It found and negotiated a
proposed sale of all of defendants' assets
for stock in the buyer, to be followed up by
an exchange offer to the seller's
shareholders. The stock of the buyer was
publicly traded in the New York Stock
Exchange, so that the deal, in effect,
offered cash to the target's shareholders.
As a condition precedent to the sale of
assets, an exchange
Page 661 of authorized but unissued shares of the
seller (constituting about 15% of the total
issued and outstanding shares after
issuance) was to occur. Such issuance would,
of course, negate the effective veto that
plaintiffs' 51% stockholding would give it
over a transaction that would require
shareholder approval. Plaintiff sued to
invalidate the stock issuance.
The court concluded, as a factual
matter, that: "... the primary purpose of
the issuance of such shares was to prevent
control of Lunkenheimer from passing to
Condec...." 230 A.2d at 775. The court then
implied that not even a good faith dispute
over corporate policy could justify a board
in acting for the primary purpose of
reducing the voting power of a control
shareholder:
Nonetheless, I am persuaded on the basis
of the evidence adduced at trial that the
transaction here attacked unlike the
situation involving the purchase of stock
with corporate funds [the court having just
cited Bennett v. Propp, Del.Supr., 187 A.2d
405, 409 (1962), and Cheff v. Mathes,
Del.Supr.,
199 A.2d 548 (1964) ] was clearly
unwarranted because it unjustifiably strikes
at the very heart of corporate
representation by causing a stockholder with
an equitable right to a majority of
corporate stock to have his right to a
proportionate voice and influence in
corporate affairs to be diminished by the
simple act of an exchange of stock which
brought no money into the Lunkenheimer
treasury, was not connected with a stock
option plan or other proper corporate
purpose, and which was obviously designed
for the primary purpose of reducing Condec's
stockholdings in Lunkenheimer below a
majority.
Id. at 777. A per se rule that
would strike down, in equity, any board
action taken for the primary purpose of
interfering with the effectiveness of a
corporate vote would have the advantage of
relative clarity and predictability.
4 It also has the
advantage of most vigorously enforcing the
concept of corporate democracy. The
disadvantage it brings along is, of course,
the disadvantage a per se rule always has:
it may sweep too broadly.
In two recent cases dealing with
shareholder votes, this court struck down
board acts done for the primary purpose of
impeding the exercise of stockholder voting
power. In doing so, a per se rule was not
applied. Rather, it was said that, in such a
case, the board bears the heavy burden of
demonstrating a compelling justification for
such action.
In Aprahamian v. HBO & Company,
Del.Ch.,
531 A.2d 1204 (1987), the incumbent
board had moved the date of the annual
meeting on the eve of that meeting when it
learned that a dissident stockholder group
had or appeared to have in hand proxies
representing a majority of the outstanding
shares. The court restrained that action and
compelled the meeting to occur as noticed,
even though the board stated that it had
good business reasons to move the meeting
date forward, and that that action was
recommended by a special committee. The
court concluded as follows:
The corporate election process, if it is
to have any validity, must be conducted with
scrupulous fairness and without any
advantage being conferred or denied to any
candidate or slate of candidates. In the
interests of corporate democracy, those in
charge of the election machinery of a
corporation must be held to the highest
standards of providing for and conducting
corporate elections. The business judgment
rule therefore does not confer any
presumption of propriety on the acts of
directors in postponing the annual meeting.
Quite to the contrary. When the election
machinery appears, at least facially, to
have been manipulated those in charge of the
election have the burden of persuasion to
justify their actions.
Aprahamian, 531 A.2d at 1206-07.
In Phillips v. Insituform of
North America, Inc., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 9173,
Allen,
Page 662 C. (Aug. 27, 1987), the court enjoined the
voting of certain stock issued for the
primary purpose of diluting the voting power
of certain control shares. The facts were
complex. After discussing Canada Southern
and Condec in light of the more recent,
important Supreme Court opinion in Unocal
Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Company, it was
there concluded as follows:
One may read Canada Southern as creating
a black-letter rule prohibiting the issuance
of shares for the purpose of diluting a
large stockholder's voting power, but one
need not do so. It may, as well, be read as
a case in which no compelling corporate
purpose was presented that might otherwise
justify such an unusual course. Such a
reading is, in my opinion, somewhat more
consistent with the recent Unocal case.
* * *
* * *
In applying the teachings of these cases,
I conclude that no justification has been
shown that would arguably make the
extraordinary step of issuance of stock for
the admitted purpose of impeding the
exercise of stockholder rights reasonable in
light of the corporate benefit, if any,
sought to be obtained. Thus, whether our law
creates an unyielding prohibition to the
issuance of stock for the primary purpose of
depriving a controlling shareholder of
control or whether, as Unocal suggests to my
mind, such an extraordinary step might be
justified in some circumstances, the
issuance of the Leopold shares was, in my
opinion, an unjustified and invalid
corporate act.
Phillips v. Insituform of North
America, Inc., supra at 23-24. Thus, in
Insituform, it was unnecessary to decide
whether a per se rule pertained or not.
In my view, our inability to
foresee now all of the future settings in
which a board might, in good faith,
paternalistically seek to thwart a
shareholder vote, counsels against the
adoption of a per se rule invalidating, in
equity, every board action taken for the
sole or primary purpose of thwarting a
shareholder vote, even though I recognize
the transcending significance of the
franchise to the claims to legitimacy of our
scheme of corporate governance. It may be
that some set of facts would justify such
extreme action.
5
This, however, is not such a case.
3. Defendants have demonstrated
no sufficient justification for the action
of December 31 which was intended to prevent
an unaffiliated majority of shareholders
from effectively exercising their right to
elect eight new directors.
The board was not faced with a
coercive action taken by a powerful
shareholder against the interests of a
distinct shareholder constituency (such as a
public minority). It was presented with a
consent
Page 663 solicitation by a 9% shareholder. Moreover,
here it had time (and understood that it had
time) to inform the shareholders of its
views on the merits of the proposal subject
to stockholder vote. The only justification
that can, in such a situation, be offered
for the action taken is that the board knows
better than do the shareholders what is in
the corporation's best interest. While that
premise is no doubt true for any number of
matters, it is irrelevant (except insofar as
the shareholders wish to be guided by the
board's recommendation) when the question is
who should comprise the board of directors.
The theory of our corporation law confers
power upon directors as the agents of the
shareholders; it does not create Platonic
masters. It may be that the Blasius
restructuring proposal was or is unrealistic
and would lead to injury to the corporation
and its shareholders if pursued. Having
heard the evidence, I am inclined to think
it was not a sound proposal. The board
certainly viewed it that way, and that view,
held in good faith, entitled the board to
take certain steps to evade the risk it
perceived. It could, for example, expend
corporate funds to inform shareholders and
seek to bring them to a similar point of
view. See, e.g. Hall v. Trans-Lux Daylight
Picture Screen Corporation, Del.Ch., 171 A.
226, 227 (1934); Hibbert v. Hollywood Park,
Inc., Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 339 (1982). But
there is a vast difference between expending
corporate funds to inform the electorate and
exercising power for the primary purpose of
foreclosing effective shareholder action. A
majority of the shareholders, who were not
dominated in any respect, could view the
matter differently than did the board. If
they do, or did, they are entitled to employ
the mechanisms provided by the corporation
law and the Atlas certificate of
incorporation to advance that view. They are
also entitled, in my opinion, to restrain
their agents, the board, from acting for the
principal purpose of thwarting that action.
I therefore conclude that, even
finding the action taken was taken in good
faith, it constituted an unintended
violation of the duty of loyalty that the
board owed to the shareholders. I note
parenthetically that the concept of an
unintended breach of the duty of loyalty is
unusual but not novel. See Lerman v.
Diagnostic Data, supra; AC Acquisitions
Corp. v. Anderson, Clayton & Co., Del.Ch.,
519 A.2d 103 (1986). That action will,
therefore, be set aside by order of this
court.
V.
I turn now to a discussion of the
second case which is a Section 225 case
designed to determine whether the nominees
of Blasius were elected to an expanded Atlas
board pursuant to the consent procedure.
6
On March 6, 1988, after several
rounds of mailings by each side, Blasius
presented consents to the corporation
purporting to adopt its five proposals. The
corporation appointed an independent
fiduciary (Manufacturers Hanover Trust
Company) to act as judge of the stockholder
vote. It reported a final tally report on
March 17 and issued a Certificate of the
Stockholder Vote on March 22. That
certificate stated that the vote had been
exceedingly close and that, as calculated by
Manufacturer's Hanover, none of Blasius'
proposals had succeeded. In order to be
adopted by a majority of shares entitled to
vote, each proposition needed to garner
1,486,293 consents. Each was about 45,000
shares short (about 1.5% of the total
outstanding stock).
7
Blasius' Position
Blasius contends that the
inspector of elections made an error in the
counting of the vote that under our law
should be
Page 664 reviewed, and, when reviewed, must be
corrected. When corrected, it contends the
vote adopted each of its proposals. That
"error" is described below. Blasius goes on
to argue that while the court may and should
review the testimonial (deposition) evidence
that establishes this point, it may not rely
upon other evidence (offered by Atlas and
admitted over objection) that tends to
establish that a material number of shares
were counted as granting consent by record
holders either without authority or in
contravention of the beneficial owners'
actual intention.
The single "error" that Blasius
seeks to have remedied relates to the effect
that the judges gave to revocations received
from record holders for whom earlier dated
consents had been submitted. The background
must be set forth. Each side made two
mailings to shareholders. Each mailing
enclosed a card for voting. The Blasius
(white) card provide a space to mark
"consent," "consent withheld," or "abstain."
8 It provided that
"[s]igned but unmarked consent cards will be
deemed to give consent to the action set
forth below."
9
The management (blue) card was intended as a
revocation card. It also addressed each of
the five propositions. While it was intended
as a means to revoke consents, one could
vote to give a consent by using that card as
well. (It is unclear why this revocation
card did not simply provide for the
revocation of consents already given;
perhaps SEC rules require the added
confusion that providing for the giving of a
consent on a revocation card entails). A
"revoke" vote would, of course, have no
meaning unless that shareholder had
previously granted a "consent." The judges
received many revoke cards that did not
relate to prior consents--some shareholders
used the revoke card as one might use a
proxy card to express endorsement of
management.
Voting, or the granting of
consent to stockholder action, is, of
course, the legal right of record holders of
stock only. In practice, there are often as
many as four (or more) levels of activity in
connection with a vote or a consent
solicitation. First, record holders are
frequently depository companies (Depository
Trust Company, for example, holding through
its nominee, Cede & Co.). They hold for
brokers or other institutions, who in turn
hold for beneficial owners. The institutions
sometimes contract with Independent Election
Company of America (IECA) which distributes
voting materials for brokers to their
customers and which, as agent, receives back
proxy cards or consent cards from beneficial
owners, collects them and makes out one or
more cards for each broker or bank for which
it acts. IECA then physically sends voting
cards to the corporation or the judges of
election. The depository companies (the
actual record holders) will have given
blanket proxies to their customers--the
institutional record holders, who will then
act themselves or through IECA.
The judges of the process counted
the vote according to the following
procedure in calculating the consents.
First, the cards of individual stockholders
were treated. All of the Blasius (white)
cards and the Atlas (blue) cards were put in
alphabetical order. They were then matched
to see if any consents granted were revoked
by later blue cards and the results tallied.
The same general process was
followed with the institutional record
holders, but it
Page 665 was more complex. First, the cards for each
broker or institution were gathered
together--both white consents and blue
revokes. The consent cards were then
inspected to see if there were "clear
duplicates." Some institutions--banks
typically, but more rarely, brokers--noted
their own subaccount number on the consent
cards; these numbers were taken to refer to
a beneficial owner's account with the
institution, and when the same number
appeared on a later dated consent, it was
taken as a duplicate of an earlier one
having the same number. Accordingly, in
those instances, the earlier consent was not
counted. Brokers, however, do not tend to
show subaccount numbers, and with respect to
brokerage accounts, there is generally no
way for an inspector to know whether a later
consent was intended to substitute for an
earlier one, unless the earlier one voted
all of the shares registered in the name of
that broker (or more correctly, all of the
shares which Cede & Co. holds for that
broker).
10
The judges matched later
revocations with consents. Since most
financial institution cards did not have
subaccount numbers or otherwise identify the
beneficial owner of the shares being voted,
there was no way to be sure that a later
revocation for, e.g., 2,000 shares was
intended to revoke pro tanto an earlier
consent for, e.g., 5,000 shares, or whether
it represented an altogether different 2,000
shares. The judges sought independent legal
advice on how they should handle this
question. They were advised the following
day that they should not seek information
beyond that which the cards afforded, and
where a record holder revoked consent for
some number of shares, that card should be
given effect by subtracting from the number
of consents submitted by that record holder,
the number of shares represented by later
dated revocations. This was then done. In
some instances, the number of later dated
consents exceeded the number of consents
submitted by that registered owner.
The judges realized that if the
institutions (or IECA who had acted for many
of them) had already matched later dated
revocations with earlier consents from the
same beneficial owner, and had, with respect
to any beneficial holder, sent only a
consent reflecting a net position, then the
process of netting that the judges used
would result in disenfranchising some
shareholders. The judges adopted the tack of
proceeding as if the record holder (or IECA)
had not discarded prior consents that had
been revoked. They filed a qualified report,
however, noting this choice and reporting
the results of the vote on the contrary
assumption. That report shows that between
56,000 and 59,000 consents (depending upon
which of the five propositions are
considered) were counted as revoked by
reason of this netting process. (About half
of those were consents sent by IECA and half
directly from institutional record holders).
Had no netting been done, the judges would
have reported that each of the propositions
had been consented to by a very small
majority of all shares.
During the course of the count,
at the instigation of Blasius, an IECA
official telephoned one of the judges of
election and explained the process that IECA
used in its task as agent for various
brokers and banks in sending consent
materials, receiving them back, computing
totals by beneficial owners, and then
creating master consents or revoke cards.
That process deletes prior consents from a
particular beneficial owner before reporting
(or sending in to the judges) net positions.
Discovery in this case, and evidence
admitted at trial, establishes that this
report to the judges of the IECA process was
correct. The judges, however, elected, in
good faith, to exclude this information from
their report (except insofar as they noted
the problem and the results on the
alternative assumption).
Page 666
Blasius contends that this course
resulted in a clear miscount that now must
be corrected.
Atlas' Position
Atlas responds in two principal
ways.
11 First, it
says that where the judges act in good
faith, neither they nor the court may
consider any information except that which
appears on the cards. Since the cards in
issue do not disclose beneficial ownership,
the only course open to the judges, based
the upon the information on the cards, was
to assume that the later dated revocation
cards did revoke consents that were in hand.
12 The demands of
a feasible administration of the corporate
franchise require that, absent fraud or
other wrongdoing, proxy contests or consent
contests be judged on the "ballots" and not
on extrinsic evidence. On that basis, Atlas
asserts the judges' tally must be affirmed.
Atlas' second position is that if
one is to inquire beyond the face of the
consent cards themselves, then one--in this
instance--will see that many, many mistakes
were made in this process, a few by the
judges and a more significant number by the
record holders; if all of those mistakes are
to be reviewed and corrected, the result, as
declared by the judges, would remain
unchanged. A good deal of discovery was
conducted, and testimony admitted,
concerning this matter. A few examples of
the sort of errors to which Atlas here
refers are necessary to appreciate its
argument. Its discovery program uncovered
many instances of what it contends are
errors in executing the wishes of the
beneficial owners. Its brief focuses on 14
of these. In this opinion, I will limit the
discussion to a handful, as I think that is
sufficient to understand the nature and
scale of the argument.
A.G. Edwards
A.G. Edwards returned four cards,
two each on management's blue revocation
form and two on Blasius' white consent form.
The two blue cards were dated February 19
and March 4, respectively. The later of the
two management cards was also dated March 4.
Both of the March 4 cards were stamped
"previous proxy will not be counted." In
tabulating the total number of consents
executed by A.G. Edwards, the judges summed
the number of consents given on Blasius'
February 19 card, the number of consents
given on Blasius' March 4 and the number of
consents given on management's February 19
revocation card. The March 4 management card
was received too late and was not given
effect.
In counting the February 19
Blasius card evidencing consent for 2,425
shares on all propositions in addition to
the March 4 Blasius card evidencing consent
for 12,099 shares on all propositions and
stamped "previous proxy will not be
counted," the proxy judges clearly acted
contrary to instructions on the face of the
card.
Northern Trust
The February 24 Blasius card
evidencing consent for 16,700 shares on all
propositions was counted in addition to a
later dated (March 4) Blasius card
evidencing consent for 18,820 shares.
Northern Trust's total position in Atlas
stock was 21,159 and the total of these two
consents, of course, far exceeded that. The
judges did not interpret the March 4 card as
superseding the February 24 card, but rather
interpreted the two cards as independent
(and as an implicit attempt to vote far more
shares than the shareholder owned). They
counted the two consents as voting the full
21,159 shares. This was not the intention of
Northern Trust. It has testified that it
Page 667 intended its March 4 card to supersede its
earlier card and to vote only 18,820 of its
shares in favor of the consent.
State Street Bank
According to Atlas, State Street
Bank received oral instructions from
Champion Spark Plug, a beneficial holder of
26,890 shares, to vote against the Blasius
proposals. State Street then instructed its
agent, IECA, to vote the 26,890 shares
against the Blasius proposal. Despite these
instructions, IECA delivered a card voting
26,890 shares for the proposals and the
independent judges recorded the 26,890
shares as voting for the proposals. Blasius
contends the record does not show a mistake
in this instance.
E.F. Hutton
E.F. Hutton returned both a
Blasius consent and a management revocation
card dated March 2. The management
revocation card was marked as follows:
(1) -240- FOR -5,873- AGST. -110- ABS.
(2) -200- FOR -6,023- WITHHOLD
(3) -244- FOR -5,873- AGST. -110- ABS.
(4) -244- FOR -5,873- AGST. -110- ABS.
While the evidence discloses that
Hutton intended a "for" vote to be in favor
of the consent proposal, or a consent, and
the much larger "against" vote to be a
withholding of consent (but apparently not a
revocation of a prior consent), the judges
of election counted the votes in the reverse
fashion because they appeared on a
management revocation card. That is, they
interpreted this vote as 240 revocations and
5,873 consents.
B.C. Christopher
B.C. Christopher Securities Co.
is neither a record nor a beneficial
stockholder of Atlas. Purporting to act on
behalf of some of its customers, it sent to
Securities Settlement Corporation, a
clearing house with authority to vote Atlas
stock by virtue of an omnibus proxy executed
by Cede & Co. authority to "vote the 30,000+
shares of Atlas Corp. in favor of ...
Blasius." (DX RRR; Spear Dep. at 6-7). At
the time this telex was sent, B.C.
Christopher did not know how many shares its
customers owned; the figure was given to one
Gordon Spear, a B.C. Christopher stock
broker, by plaintiff, Warren Delano.
Securities Settlement rejected this attempt
to vote all shares and requested a list of
the shareholders consenting. B.C.
Christopher then provided Securities
Settlement with a list containing the names
and positions of all customers serviced in
its Denver office whom B.C. Christopher
believed owned stock aggregating 23,800
shares.
Securities Settlement, based only
upon this list, directed IECA to vote the
positions of all those shareholders as
consenting to the Blasius proposal. All
customers were tabulated by IECA as
consenting to their full share amounts.
Evidence in this case, however, establishes
that a number of the B.C. Christopher
customers never gave B.C. Christopher any
authority to consent. The shareholdings of
B.C. Christopher customers, affirmatively
shown not to have authorized consents,
totalled some 3,550. Some of these
shareholders had indeed sent in revocation
cards intending to withhold consent prior to
the B.C. Christopher involvement, and the
unauthorized advice from the broker,
apparently stimulated by plaintiff Delano,
was treated as overriding that direct
action. Other B.C. Christopher customers
were unavailable or refused to give
deposition testimony in this case, but
documentary evidence indicates that they
have denied giving B.C. Christopher
authority to exercise power to consent on
their behalfs. (See DX CCCCC; DX DDDDD)
(1,600 shares).
In addition, although some of
B.C. Christopher's customers did in fact
deliver white consent cards to IECA, IECA
did not receive cards indicating consent to
Blasius' proposal from some 12 shareholders
representing approximately 13,500 shares.
B.C. Christopher could produce no written
evidence that these or any of the other
shareholders in fact authorized it to
consent on their behalf.
* * *
Page 668
Atlas, therefore, in summary,
replies to Blasius' position by contending
that the judges of election, acting in good
faith, handled the ministerial duty of
calculating unrevoked consents
properly--according to the face of the
consent itself, and not on the basis of
external matters. It relies upon the Supreme
Court case Williams v. Sterling Oil of
Oklahoma, Inc., Del.Supr., 273 A.2d 264
(1971) in that connection.
Beyond that, it contends that if
the court is to go beyond the face of the
consents to consider extraneous matters,
that the record developed shows that the
Blasius proposal did not garner the support
of a majority of the beneficial owners, even
if the court were to deem it appropriate to
reverse the "netting" procedure followed by
the judges. It contends that one need not
get to that level of review, however,
because a ministerial review of the consents
delivered is sufficient and, under that
approach, it would prevail.
Finally, I should note Blasius'
rebuttal, which is as follows: It contends
that the face of the consents is what
governs, but that the judges neglected to
engage in a presumption that exists as a
matter of law. The limited evidence of
record holders that it submits simply
confirms that presumption to in fact be true
here. Once that legal presumption is
correctly understood, and the "netting" is
reversed due to its application, Blasius
says that its proposals have been adopted.
The presumption arises from the case of
Schott v. Climax Molybdenum Company, Del.
Ch., 154 A.2d 221 (1959). Blasius says
that the other evidence of "errors" is
irrelevant.
I turn to my analysis of these
positions now.
VI.
The multilevel system of
beneficial ownership of stock and the
interposition of other institutional players
between investors and corporations (e.g.,
IECA or brokers whose customers hold stock
beneficially) renders the process of
corporate voting complex. This case
demonstrates that the currently employed
process by which consents are solicited and
counted is even more prone to problems than
is the process of proxy counting. In
reviewing the computating of the outcome of
a proxy fight or a consent contest, the law
does not inquire into the subjective intent
of either the record owner or the beneficial
owner in the usual case.
13
A legal test that made inquiry
into the subjective wishes of ultimate
owners relevant would, of course, threaten
to convert every close proxy fight into
protracted and costly litigation. The law
has avoided that risk while attempting to
preserve a credible claim to corporate
democracy by announcing the rule that only
record owners are entitled to vote and if
any investor chooses to hold his stock in
some fashion other than his own name, he
thereby assumes the risk that involving
intermediaries will entail. See, e.g., The
American Hardware Corporation v. Savage Arms
Corporation, Del.Supr.,
136 A.2d 690 (1957);
ENSTAR Corp. v. Senouf, Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1351 (1987). Moreover, even as to record
owners, the administrative need for
expedition and certainty are such that
judges of election (and reviewing courts
absent fraud or breach of duty) are not to
inquire into their intention except as
expressed on the face of the proxy, consent
or other "ballot." The Supreme Court has
held:
We hold the proper rule to be
that, in the exercise of their ministerial
functions and powers, the inspectors of an
election must reject all identical but
conflicting proxies when the conflict cannot
be resolved from the face of the proxies
themselves or from the regular books and
records of the corporation. Otherwise
stated, conflicting proxies, irreconcilable
on their faces or from the books and records
of the corporation, may not be reconciled by
extrinsic evidence.
Pope v. Whitridge, 110 Md. 468, 73 A. 281,
286 (1909); 5 Fletcher, Cyclopedia of
Page 669 Corporations, § 2062 (Perm.Ed.1967); 2
Thompson on Corporations, § 1021 (3rd
Ed.1927); Rogers, Proxy Guide for Meetings
of Stockholders, §§ 19, 39 (1969). This rule
is dictated by the necessity for practical
and certain procedures in the fair handling
of proxies and the expeditious conclusion of
corporate elections.
* * *
* * *
The policy favoring correction of mistake
must be limited to corrections that can be
made from the face of the proxy itself or
from the regular books and records of the
corporation. The acceptance and
consideration of extrinsic evidence for the
purpose, especially when questioned and
controverted as here, improperly take the
inspectors over the line from the realm of
the ministerial to that of the
quasi-judicial.
Williams
v. Sterling Oil of Oklahoma, Inc., 273 A.2d
at 265-66.
Both sides to this contest invoke
the authority of Williams. Defendant does so
straightforwardly, plaintiff with the
addition of another precedent, Schott v.
Climax Molybdenum Company, Del.Ch., 154 A.2d
221 (1959). Schott is said by plaintiff to
establish a legal rule (which the judges of
election here are said to have violated)
that later proxies (and, by extension,
consents) from brokers are presumed to be
with respect to stock held for different
beneficial owners than earlier proxies from
the same broker, unless otherwise noted on
the face of the proxy. In Schott, the court
was asked to review the vote that authorized
a merger. The judges had counted several
proxies received sequentially from a broker
(actually there were a number of brokers in
the same position). Together those proxies
covered less than the total number of shares
registered in the name of the broker. On
their face, the proxies did not revoke prior
proxies. The judges counted all such
proxies.
On review, plaintiffs contended
that this was error. Their theory was that a
later proxy revokes an earlier one. The
court held:
Clearly a later proxy revokes an
earlier one when such instructions appear on
the face of the later proxy. And there is no
question but that a later proxy revokes an
earlier one where the total number of shares
registered in the name of the person giving
the proxies is included in each proxy. But
is the rule that a later proxy revokes an
earlier one applied indiscriminately?
As noted, the various proxies in
each series were not, in toto, in excess of
the total registered in the particular
stockholder's name. Nor were any
instructions contained on the proxies. Thus,
there is nothing on the face of the proxies
which rendered the counting of all of such
shares inconsistent. Although not the case
here, such a later proxy might be intended
to revoke an earlier one. Since it is not
necessarily so, I believe the inspectors of
election properly resolved the doubt in
favor of counting both. My conclusion is
based in part on a general policy against
disenfranchisement. See Gow v. Consolidated
Coppermines Corp. [19 Del.Ch. 172, 165 A.
136] above;
Investment Associates v. Standard Power &
Light Corp., 29 Del.Ch. 225, 48 A.2d 501,
affirmed 29 Del.Ch. 593, 51 A.2d 572. It is
also based upon the fact, as here, that this
problem arises largely from broker given
proxies. Such brokers are undoubtedly
expressing the varying wishes of beneficial
owners.
Obviously, brokers should, as the
Stock Exchange Rule provides, make their
intention clear on the face of the proxy.
Nevertheless, I think my conclusion is more
likely to implement the true intent of the
beneficial owner. I conclude that the
particular proxies here involved were
properly counted by the inspectors. Nor is
there any basis in the evidence for
rejecting such votes. The evidence adduced
shows that in fact the shares, with one
exception, were voted in accordance with the
wishes of the beneficial owners.
Schott v. Climax Molybdenum
Company, supra at 223. (emphasis added).
I do not read Schott as
establishing a rule that, in a consent
solicitation, a later
Page 670 dated revocation from a broker-registered
owner is to be assumed to be with respect to
a different beneficial owner than an earlier
dated consent unless the reverse appears
from the face of the card. Such a rule would
require judges to assume that the submission
of revocation cards (at least those that
contained no consents as well) was a futile
act since the "assumption" would leave such
revocations in each instance revoking
nothing. The proxy setting with which Schott
dealt is different than the consent setting
in a significant respect. There, to hold
that a later dated proxy by a
broker-registered owner was not intended to
revoke an earlier one (on the assumption
that it is with respect to a different
beneficial owner) is to give effect to both
submissions. It accords to each submission
the effect that it calls for on its face.
The later Williams opinion of the Supreme
Court affirms that, absent fraud, or breach
of duty, effect must be given to properly
submitted proxies that are not inconsistent.
Plaintiffs' interpretation of Schott would
accord no effect to a properly submitted
revocation, and is not required by Schott
itself. It must, therefore, be rejected; it
is, in my opinion, inconsistent with
Williams.
There were mistakes made by the
judges (see, e.g., footnotes 9 and 10 above)
and by record owners and their agents; there
appears to have been unauthorized and
perhaps even wrongful behavior (e.g., B.C.
Christopher & Co.). Much of the problem
arises from the perhaps thoughtless
utilization of proxy contest procedures for
a consent solicitation contest. But the
mistakes of the judges, on balance, tend to
cut against plaintiff. The "netting"
procedure did not, in my opinion, constitute
a mistake of theirs. Rather, it resulted
from the actions of record holders or their
IECA agent. As such, I see it as not
different in principle from other execution
errors of record holders (e.g., E.F. Hutton,
and possibly, State Street Bank).
We cannot know, in these
circumstances, what the outcome of this
close contest would have been if the true
wishes of all beneficial owners had been
accurately measured. The parties must, in my
opinion, be content with the result
announced by the judges. Those mistakes that
were made by the judges do not alter the
outcome.
Judgment will be entered in favor
of defendants. An appropriate form of order
may be submitted on notice.
1 See, e.g., E. Rostow, To Whom and For
What Ends Is Corporate Management
Responsible, in The Corporation in Modern
Society (E.S. Mason ed.1959). The late
Professor A.A. Berle once dismissed the
shareholders' meeting as a "kind of ancient,
meaningless ritual like some of the
ceremonies that go with the mace in the
House of Lords." Berle, Economic Power and
the Free Society (1957), quoted in Balotti,
Finkelstein, Williams, Meetings of
Shareholders (1987) at 2.
2 Delaware courts have long exercised a
most sensitive and protective regard for the
free and effective exercise of voting
rights. This concern suffuses our law,
manifesting itself in various settings. For
example, the perceived importance of the
franchise explains the cases that hold that
a director's fiduciary duty requires
disclosure to shareholders asked to
authorize a transaction of all material
information in the corporation's possession,
even if the transaction is not a
self-dealing one. See, e.g., Smith v. Van
Gorkom, Del.Supr.,
488 A.2d 858 (1985); In
re Anderson Clayton Shareholders'
Litigation, Del.Ch., 519 A.2d 669, 675
(1986).
A similar concern, for credible corporate
democracy, underlies those cases that strike
down board action that sets or moves an
annual meeting date upon a finding that such
action was intended to thwart a shareholder
group from effectively mounting an election
campaign. See, e.g., Schnell v. Chris Craft,
supra; Lerman v. Diagnostic Data, Inc.,
Del.Ch.,
421 A.2d 906 (1980); Aprahamian v.
HBO, Del.Ch.,
531 A.2d 1204 (1987).
The cases invalidating stock issued for
the primary purpose of diluting the voting
power of a control block also reflect the
law's concern that a credible form of
corporate democracy be maintained. See
Canada Southern Oils, Ltd. v. Manabi
Exploration Co., Inc., Del.Ch.,
96 A.2d 810
(1953); Condec Corporation v. Lunkenheimer
Company, Del.Ch.,
230 A.2d 769 (1967);
Phillips v. Insituform of North America,
Inc., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 9173, Allen, C.,
1987 WL 16285 (August 27, 1987).
Similarly, a concern for corporate
democracy is reflected (1) in our statutory
requirement of annual meetings (8 Del.C. §
211), and in the cases that aggressively and
summarily enforce that right. See, e.g.,
Coaxial Communications, Inc. v. CNA
Financial Corp., Del.Supr., 367 A.2d 994
(1976); Speiser v. Baker, Del.Ch.,
525 A.2d 1001 (1987), and (2) in our consent statute
(8 Del. C. § 228) and the interpretation it
has been accorded. See Datapoint Corp. v.
Plaza Securities Co., Del.Supr.,
496 A.2d 1031 (1985) (order); Allen v. Prime
Computer, Inc., Del.Supr., No. 26, 1988 [538
A.2d 1113 (table) ] (Jan. 26, 1988); Frantz
Manufacturing Company v. EAC Industries,
Del.Supr.,
501 A.2d 401 (1985).
3 I thus am unable to be guided by the
somewhat different view expressed in the
unreported case American Rent-A-Car, Inc. v.
Cross, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 7583, 1984 WL 8204
(May 9, 1984).
4 While it must be admitted that any rule
that requires for its invocation the finding
of a subjective mental state (i.e., a
primary purpose) necessarily will lead to
controversy concerning whether it applies or
not, nevertheless, once it is determined to
apply, this per se rule would be clearer
than the alternative discussed below.
5 Imagine the facts of Condec changed
very slightly and coming up in today's world
of corporate control transactions. Assume an
acquiring company buys 25% of the target's
stock in a small number of privately
negotiated transactions. It then commences a
public tender offer for 26% of the company
stock at a cash price that the board, in
good faith, believes is inadequate.
Moreover, the acquiring corporation
announces that it may or may not do a
second-step merger, but if it does one, the
consideration will be junk bonds that will
have a value, when issued, in the opinion of
its own investment banker, of no more than
the cash being offered in the tender offer.
In the face of such an offer, the board may
have a duty to seek to protect the company's
shareholders from the coercive effects of
this inadequate offer. Assume, for purposes
of the hypothetical, that neither newly
amended Section 203, nor any defensive
device available to the target specifically,
offers protection. Assume that the target's
board turns to the market for corporate
control to attempt to locate a more fairly
priced alternative that would be available
to all shareholders. And assume that just as
the tender offer is closing, the board
locates an all cash deal for all shares at a
price materially higher than that offered by
the acquiring corporation. Would the board
of the target corporation be justified in
issuing sufficient shares to the second
acquiring corporation to dilute the 51%
stockholder down so that it no longer had a
practical veto over the merger or sale of
assets that the target board had arranged
for the benefit of all shares? It is not
necessary to now hazard an opinion on that
abstraction. The case is clearly close
enough, however, despite the existence of
the Condec precedent, to demonstrate, to my
mind at least, the utility of a rule that
permits, in some extreme circumstances, an
incumbent board to act in good faith for the
purpose of interfering with the outcome of a
contemplated vote. See also American
International Rent-A-Car, Inc. v. Cross,
supra, n. 3.
6 Having decided that the board action of
December 31 was invalid in equity, I pass
over the dispute whether Messrs. Winter and
Devaney could be removed from office by
shareholders only for cause.
7 The report of the count was as follows:
Proposition 1 (precatory resolution) 1,444,807
Proposition 2 (amend bylaws to increase 1,443,464
board from 7 to 15)
Proposition 3 (removal of Winters and 1,446,209
Devaney)
Proposition 4 (election of eight new 1,442,023
directors)
Proposition 5 (election of up to seven 1,441,234
new directors in event Atlas has
more than seven directors validly)
8 Since a consent solicitation requires
the affirmative vote of all shares
authorized to vote on the question, an
"abstain" is the functional equivalent of a
"consent withheld" vote.
9 This instruction was interpreted by the
judges to mean that a signed card on which a
shareholder had indicated a position on a
single proposition counted as an affirmative
vote on each of the other propositions.
Literally, a consent card that marks only
one of several propositions is not "an
unmarked consent." The judges of election
clearly erred in counting such cards as
consents for unmarked propositions. The
cards on their face did not indicate that a
consent had been granted in such instances.
There were between 400 and 1,000 consents
counted as a result of partially completed
cards from individuals, many of whom simply
marked "withhold" or "abstain" as to one
proposition. From institutions, 1,660
consents were counted where only a
"withhold" or "abstain" was marked and
approximately 15,500 consents were counted
where one proposition was consented to, but
others were unmarked.
10 In one instance, a later dated consent
for 12,099 shares noted, "[p]revious proxy
will not be counted." The previous consent
had been for 2,425 shares. Since the record
shareholder owned more than 14,524 shares,
the judges counted both as not including a
"clear duplicate." This was, in my opinion,
clear error. See pp. 666, infra.
11 A third argument that, with respect to
two of the five proposals, more than 60 days
provided in Section 228 elapsed before the
consents were delivered, will not need to be
addressed.
12 The problem apparently arises, in
part, from the fact that IECA and other
institutional record holders not only gave
effect to the revocations from beneficial
owners (thus dissipating the effect of those
revocations), but also sent a revocation
card to the judges reflecting that
revocation. This process works in a proxy
contest where a later proxy not only revokes
an earlier one, but acts as an affirmative
vote. It does not, however, make much sense
in a consent contest where a revocation has
only one effect, and once it is given that
effect, is inoperative.
13 A different approach, at least by the
court, might well be appropriate where fraud
or the breach of fiduciary duty is alleged.
See, e.g.,
In re Canal Construction Co., Del.Ch., 182
A. 545 (1936). |