| Page 962 583 A.2d 962
15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1167
WARNER COMMUNICATIONS INC., a
Delaware Corporation, Time
Warner Inc., a Delaware Corporation
(formerly Time
Incorporated), and TW Sub Inc., a
Delaware Corporation,
Plaintiffs-
Counterclaim
Defendants,
v.
CHRIS-CRAFT INDUSTRIES, INC., a Delaware
Corporation, and
BHC, Inc., a Delaware Corporation,
Defendants-Counterclaim Plaintiffs.
Civil Action No. 10965. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Date Submitted: Aug. 28, 1989.
Date Decided: Sept. 7, 1989.
Page 963
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1171]
Charles F. Richards, Jr., William J. Wade,
Thomas A. Beck, Gregory V. Varallo, Donald
A. Bussard, Daniel A. Dreisbach, and Michael
J. Feinstein of Richards, Layton & Finger,
Wilmington, and Eric M. Roth, and Scott A.
Edelman of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz,
New York City, for plaintiff and
counterclaim defendant Warner Communications
Inc.
Martin P. Tully, Thomas Reed
Hunt, Jr., and Lawrence A. Hamermesh, of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, and Lisa D. Haas and Thomas P.
Ogden of Davis Polk & Wardwell, New York
City, for plaintiffs and counterclaim
defendants Time Warner Inc. and TW Sub Inc.
Charles S. Crompton, Jr., Donald
J. Wolfe, Jr., and Arthur L. Dent of Potter
Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington, and Peter M.
Fishbein, Scott M. Berman, Karen E. Katzman,
and Jane W. Parver of Kaye, Scholer,
Fierman, Hays & Handler, New York City, for
defendants and counterclaim plaintiffs
Chris-Craft Industries, Inc. and BHC, Inc.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
Pending is a motion for judgment
on the pleadings. Plaintiffs seek a
determination that the related holders of
Warner Communications Inc.'s Series B
Variable Rate Cumulative Convertible
Preferred stock ("Series B Preferred") are
not entitled to a class vote upon a proposed
merger among Warner, its controlling
shareholder Time Incorporated (now renamed
Time Warner Inc.) and TW Sub Inc., a wholly
owned subsidiary of Time Warner.
Plaintiffs in this declaratory
judgment action are the parties proposing
the merger--Warner, Time and TW Sub, all of
which are Delaware corporations. Defendants
are two corporations, Chris-Craft
Industries, Inc. and its controlled
subsidiary, BHC, Inc., which together with
its wholly owned subsidiary, is the holder
of the Series B Preferred stock. For
purposes of this opinion, plaintiffs
generally will be referred to as Warner;
Time Warner, for purposes of clarity, will
be referred to as Time and the holders of
the Series B Preferred will be referred to
as BHC.
The merger in question is the
proposed "back end" of a transaction, the
first stage of which was a public tender
offer for 51% of [15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1172]
Warner's common stock for cash that closed
on July 24, 1989. In that merger, the Series
B Preferred stock would be cancelled and BHC
as the holder of it would receive a new
senior security, Time Series BB Convertible
Preferred. For purposes of this motion (but
for those purposes only), plaintiffs have
stipulated that that substitution would
adversely affect defendants.
For the reasons that follow, I
conclude that BHC has no right under the
Warner
Page 964 certificate of incorporation to a class vote
on the proposed merger. In brief, I reach
this conclusion upon consideration of the
pertinent provisions of the Series B
Preferred stock's certificate of designation
read in the context of the entire document
and in the context of the established
corporation law. This consideration compels
the conclusion that the drafters of this
document did not intend the holder of the
Series B Preferred to possess a veto over
every merger in which its interest would be
adversely affected. Such a right was
conferred expressly but only in narrowly
defined circumstances concededly not present
here. Absent such circumstances, I conclude
that there is no right in the holders of the
Series B Preferred to a class vote on a
merger. The statement of the reasoning that
leads to this conclusion entails a separate
treatment of each of the two certificate of
designation provisions--Section 3.3(i) and
Section 3.4(i)--upon which BHC predicates
its contrary assertion.
The facts are as admitted in the
Answer and the Reply to Counterclaim.
Neither party contends that there are
material facts in dispute at this stage (on
the assumption that the Series B Preferred
shareholders will be adversely affected by
the merger) and both assert that the legal
question presented is appropriately
addressed on the pleadings as they now
exist.
I.
The Series B Preferred stock
The Series B Preferred was issued
pursuant to an Exchange Agreement dated as
of December 29, 1983 among Warner,
Chris-Craft and BHC. Under that Exchange
Agreement, Warner obtained BHC preferred
stock convertible into 42.5% of BHC's
outstanding common stock. BHC obtained the
entire issue, 15,200,000 shares, of Warner's
Series B Preferred stock.
As provided in the certificate of
designation creating the Series B Preferred,
each share of that stock is entitled to a
quarterly dividend equal to the greater of
(a) $0.125 or (b) 200% of the regular
quarterly [15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1173]
dividend, if any, payable on a share of
Warner common stock.
1
Each share is convertible into common stock
in accordance with a complex formula, and
each carries the same voting rights as the
common stock, except in the event that a
dividend is in default. In that event, the
Series B Preferred stock "voting as a class"
elects three directors. Generally, however:
Except as otherwise by the Certificate of
Incorporation or by law provided, the shares
of Series B Stock and the shares of Common
Stock ... shall be voted together as one
class.
Certificate of Designation,
Section 3.1.
Two provisions do otherwise
provide, and it is they that provide the
ground upon which the parties' ongoing
battle
2 is now
fought. Section 3.3 of the certificate of
designation creates a right in the holders
of the Series B Preferred to participate
with other holders of Warner preferred in a
class vote under certain circumstances.
Section 3.4(i) of the certificate creates a
right in the holders of Series B Preferred
stock alone to a series vote in certain
circumstances. Section 3.3 provides in
pertinent part as follows:
So long as any shares of Series B
Stock shall be outstanding and unless the
consent or approval of a greater number of
shares shall then be required by law, (i)
the affirmative vote or written consent of
the holders of at least two-thirds of the
total number of the then outstanding shares
of Series B Stock and of any other series of
Preferred Stock having the right to vote as
a class on such matter, voting as a class,
shall be necessary to alter or change any
rights, preferences or limitations of the
Preferred Stock so as to affect the holders
of all of such shares adversely....
Page 965
In pertinent part, Section 3.4
provides as follows:
So long as any shares of Series B
Stock shall be outstanding and unless the
consent or approval of a greater number of
shares shall then be required by law,
without [15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1174] first
obtaining the consent or approval of the
holders of at least two-thirds of the number
of shares of the Series B Stock at the time
outstanding, given in person or by proxy
either in writing or at a meeting at which
the holders of such shares shall be entitled
to vote separately as a class, the
Corporation shall not (i) amend, alter or
repeal any of the provisions of the
Certificate of Incorporation or By-laws of
the Corporation so as to affect adversely
any of the preferences, rights, powers or
privileges of the Series B Stock or the
holders thereof....
The proposed Warner-Time merger
Time and Warner have executed a
merger agreement, which was amended and
restated as of June 16, 1989. That agreement
contemplates a two-step transaction by which
Time would acquire all of the outstanding
stock of Warner. The first step was
completed on July 24, 1989 when Time
accepted for purchase 100 million shares of
Warner common stock, representing
approximately 50% of Warner's common stock,
at $70 per share in cash.
Under the amended merger
agreement, the tender offer is to be
followed by a merger in which TW Sub will be
merged into Warner which will survive as a
wholly owned subsidiary of Time. The Warner
common stock, other than that held by Time,
will be converted into securities, cash or
other property.
3
The Warner Series B Preferred is to be
converted into Time Series BB Preferred
stock. The rights and preferences of the
Time Series BB Preferred are set forth in a
proposed form of certificate of designation.
Since the parties have stipulated
for the purposes of this motion that the
holders of Warner Series B Preferred will be
adversely affected by the back-end merger,
it is unnecessary to summarize the terms of
the Time BB Preferred.
The amended merger agreement
provides that shares of Warner common stock
and Warner Series B Preferred stock, the
holders of which comply with all provisions
of the General Corporation Law concerning
appraisal rights, will not be converted in
the back-end merger.
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1175] II.
A party is entitled to judgment
on the pleadings when, accepting the well
pleaded facts admitted in the Answer to be
true, there is no material fact in dispute
and the moving party is entitled to judgment
under the law. 5 Wright & Miller, Federal
Practice and Procedure § 1386 at p. 692. On
such a motion, the nonmoving party is
entitled to the benefit of any inferences
that may fairly be drawn from the nonmoving
party's pleading. Harman v. Masoneilan
Intern., Inc., Del.Supr., 442 A.2d 487
(1982); Du Pont v. Du Pont, Del.Supr., 90
A.2d 467 (1952). The motion should not be
granted unless it appears to a reasonable
certainty that under no set of facts that
could be proven under the allegations of the
Answer would plaintiffs' claim be defeated.
In this instance, however, both parties
agree that no material facts are in dispute
and that the matter is in a posture for a
ruling upon the legal questions presented.
III.
BHC contends that it is entitled
to a class vote on the proposed merger under
two distinct provisions of Warner's
certificate of incorporation. First,
defendants argue that Section 3.3(i) of the
certificate of designation gives BHC the
right to a class vote. It contends that
Section 3.3(i) protects against any
corporate action that alters or changes "any
rights or preferences" of the preferred
stock so as to adversely
Page 966 affect the preferred shareholders. The
proposed merger, it says, will alter the
rights of the Series B Preferred (and on
this motion presumptively in an adverse way)
by substituting a new security--Time BB
Preferred--for the Series B Preferred. Thus,
it concludes, Section 3.3(i) requires that
BHC be afforded the opportunity to vote on
that merger separately.
Second, defendants argue that
Section 3.4(i) of the certificate of
designation entitles BHC to a vote on the
back-end merger because the Warner
certificate of incorporation will admittedly
be amended by the merger and necessarily so
under Section 243 of the Delaware
corporation law. That amendment they
say--eliminating the provisions authorizing
the Series B Preferred--will adversely
affect BHC and will trigger the right to a
class vote under Section 3.4(i).
Finally, defendants contend that
the fact that Section 3.4(iii) (quoted below
at pp. 22-23) specifically addresses mergers
does not preclude other sections, such as
Sections 3.3(i) and 3.4(i), from applying to
mergers.
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1176] Warner
answers that it is Section 3.4(iii) of the
certificate of designation that is the
dispositive provision relating to mergers.
That section requires supermajority approval
of a merger by the holders of Series B
Preferred if in the merger they receive
equity securities that are not the highest
ranked equity securities of the surviving,
resulting or acquiring corporation. Warner
points out that under the merger the holders
of Series B Preferred stock will receive
Time Series BB Preferred stock which will be
the senior equity security of Time. Thus,
plaintiffs contend that Section 3.4(iii) is
the pertinent provision and it grants no
right to vote on the back-end merger to the
Series B Preferred shareholders.
As to BHC's claim that Sections
3.3(i) and 3.4(i) do grant it the right to a
class vote in these circumstances, Warner
contends first that Section 3.3(i) was
intended to protect only rights and
preferences of the entire class of preferred
stock, not rights and preferences granted to
one or more particular series of preferred
stock. The only right or preference
necessarily shared by every series of
preferred stock, plaintiffs continue, is the
right granted in Article Fourth (C), clause
(2) of Warner's certificate of incorporation
to share ratably in dividends and asset
distribution in certain circumstances.
4 That right, they
say, will not be affected in the merger as
the Time Series BB Preferred will be
protected by an identical provision in
Time's charter.
Second, it is argued that Section
3.4(i), which requires supermajority
approval by the Series B Preferred shares in
order to amend Warner's certificate of
incorporation or bylaws "so as to affect
adversely" the Series B Preferred, does not
grant defendants a vote in the back-end
merger because it is the merger, not the
amendments [15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1177] to the
certificate of incorporation, that will
(presumably) adversely affect defendants.
IV.
In evaluating these contending
positions, it should first be noted that the
existence and extent of special stock rights
are determined by reference to the issuer's
certificate of incorporation; such rights
are essentially contractual in nature.
Rothschild International Corp. v. Liggett
Group, Inc., Del.Supr.,
474 A.2d 133, 136
Page 967 (1984); Wood v. Coastal States Gas Corp.,
Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 932, 937 (1979);
Ellingwood v. Wolf's Head Oil Refining Co.,
Del.Supr., 38 A.2d 743, 747 (1944). In
determining them, a court should apply the
same techniques of contract interpretation
generally applied to contractual disputes.
Thus, the certificate of designation should
be construed in its entirety, and an attempt
should be made to reconcile all of the
certificate's provisions "in order to
determine the meaning intended to be given
to any portion of it." Ellingwood, supra, at
747. See Wood, supra, at 937. While the
effort is to arrive at the intended meaning
of the words employed, it is generally said
that rights or preferences over common stock
should be clearly expressed and not
presumed. Rothschild, supra, at 136;
Ellingwood, supra, at 747; Rainbow
Navigation, Inc. v. Yonge, Del.Ch., C.A. No.
9432, 1989 WL 40805 (April 24, 1989).
V.
For the reasons set forth below,
I conclude that defendants' claims are not
sound and that plaintiffs are entitled to
declaratory judgment to the effect that they
seek. This conclusion follows from the
following, more detailed conclusions that:
1. Section 3.4(i) does not create
a right to a class vote on the proposed
merger despite the fact that Warner's
certificate of incorporation is being
amended in the merger because, in the
circumstances, the amendment itself will not
"adversely affect" the Series B Preferred.
(See pp. 967-968, infra );
2. Assuming Section 3.3(i) covers
"rights" other than those created by the
ratability provision of Warner's charter
(see note 6 regarding that assumption), then
with respect to alteration or change of such
rights by charter amendment, the same
reasoning that supports the conclusion that
the proposed merger does not trigger a class
vote under Section [15 Del. J. Corp. L.
1178] 3.4(i) requires an identical
conclusion with respect to 3.3(i). (See pp.
968-969, infra ).
3. If the amendment of Warner's
certificate does not trigger the class vote
provisions of either 3.4(i) or 3.3(i), the
dispositive question becomes whether the
merger itself may trigger that result under
the language of Section 3.3(i). Stated
differently, the core issue here may be said
to be whether the predicate words of Section
3.3(i), "alter or change," are to be read to
include "convert pursuant to a merger." I
conclude that Section 3.3(i) does not create
a right to a class vote on a merger that
will convert the Series B Preferred stock
into other securities, other property or
cash. (See pp. 968-971 infra ).
A.
As here pertinent, Section 3.4(i)
provides a right to a series vote (i.e., the
Series B Preferred voting alone) in the
event of a charter amendment that amends,
alters or repeals any provision of the
certificate of incorporation so as to
adversely affect the Series B Preferred or
its holders.
Warner will be the surviving
corporation in the proposed merger. Its
charter will be amended in the merger. It is
assumed that the substitution of the merger
consideration for the Series B Preferred
stock is damaging to defendants.
Nevertheless, Section 3.4(i) does not, in my
opinion, grant a right to a series vote in
these circumstances because the adverse
effect upon defendants is not caused by an
amendment, alteration or repeal of any
provision of Warner's certificate of
incorporation. Rather, it is the conversion
of the Warner Series B Preferred into Time
Series BB Preferred that creates the adverse
effect. But the conversion of the Warner
Series B Preferred into the Time BB
Preferred does not depend to any extent upon
the amendment of the Warner certificate of
incorporation under Section 242 of the
General Corporation Law. That conversion
will occur pursuant to Section 251 of the
statute which authorizes mergers and defines
the steps necessary to effectuate a merger.
Given that the merger itself is
duly authorized,
5
the conversion of the Series B
Page 968 Preferred stock could occur without any
prior or [15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1179]
contemporaneous amendment to the
certificate. Since the merger does
contemplate the conversion of the Series B
Preferred into the securities of another
company, it is to be expected that the
certificate would be amended to reflect the
removal of these securities from the firm's
capital structure. Section 243 requires such
a step as a housekeeping matter, but that
section does not require that amendment to
be contemporaneous with the retirement of
the stock and it surely does not make
conversion of the stock dependent upon the
amendment it contemplates. Rather, the
amendment contemplated is necessitated by
the merger; such an amendment, like the
conversion, flows from the merger and is not
a necessary condition of it. Stated in terms
of the language of Section 3.4(i), given the
existence of the merger, the amendments of
the certificate of incorporation can in no
event themselves be said to "affect" BHC
"adversely," even if one assumes, as I do on
this motion, that the substitution of the
Time BB Preferred stock for Warner Series B
Preferred stock does have an adverse affect.
B.
I turn then to Section 3.3(i). It
requires a class vote (the Series B stock
voting with any other series of preferred
stock that has a vote on the question
presented) in order to: "alter or change any
rights ... of the Preferred stock so as to
affect the holders of all such shares
adversely." The central concern of Section
3.3(i) is action that would "alter or
change" rights of the "Preferred Stock."
6
In addressing Section 3.3(i), it
is analytically helpful to break down the
universe of acts that might arguably "alter
or change ... rights of Preferred Stock"
into two classes: amendments to a
certificate of incorporation and other forms
of acts, such as mergers, that might affect
the holders of preferred stock.
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1180] At
first blush, Section 3.3(i) appears to be
principally directed to charter amendments,
because under Delaware law, special stock
rights and preferences are set forth in a
corporate charter. Such rights must be
stated in, or derivable in a manner clearly
set forth in, the certificate of
incorporation (8 Del.C. § 151(a)) or set
forth in a certificate of designation which,
when effective (8 Del.C. § 103), amends and
becomes a part of the certificate of
incorporation (8 Del.C. § 151(g)).
Insofar as Section 3.3(i) does
address charter amendments, the amendments
that will follow the Warner-Time merger fail
to trigger its provisions for the same
reason that those amendments fail to trigger
a series vote under Section 3.4(i): the
amendments contemplated in the merger will
not themselves adversely affect the
preferred stock.
The pending motion may thus be
seen to come down to the question whether
the class vote contemplated by Section
3.3(i) can, in addition to being triggered
by an amendment to the certificate of
incorporation that "alters ... rights ...
adversely," be triggered by other forms of
transactions in which the interests of
holders of the preferred--and arguably "the
rights ... of the Preferred Stock"--are
adversely affected. Specifically, does
Section 3.3(i) reach mergers?
Will the Series B Preferred be
altered or changed in the merger within the
meaning of Section 3.3(i)? Concededly, the
shares
Page 969 of that stock will be converted into a new
security by operation of law in the merger.
Did the parties that drafted Section 3.3(i)
intend conversion of stock in a merger to be
contemplated within the phrase "alter or
change?" I cannot conclude, viewing the
certificate of designation in its entirety,
that there is even a reasonable likelihood
that they did.
The draftsmen of this
language--the negotiators to the extent it
has actually been negotiated
7--must
be deemed to have understood, and no doubt
did understand, that under Delaware law (and
generally) the securities whose
characteristics were being defined in the
certificate of designation could be
converted by merger into "shares or other
securities of the corporation surviving or
resulting from [a] merger or consolidation"
or into "cash, property, rights or
securities of any other corporation." 8
Del.C. § 251(b); Federal [15 Del. J. Corp.
L. 1181] United Corporation v. Havender,
Del.Supr., 11 A.2d 331 (1940). Those shares,
for example, could be converted into a right
to receive cash or other property in a
merger and such a conversion would not
entitle a holder of stock with a stated
value upon liquidation to that value
(Rothschild, supra ); nor would such a cash
out merger constitute a redemption of
callable securities. Dart v. Kohlberg,
Kravis, Roberts & Co., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
7366, Hartnett, V.C., 1985 WL 21145 (May 6,
1985), slip op. at 13.
It is thus elementary that the
possibility of a merger represents a
possibility of the most profound importance
to a holder of stock with special rights or
preferences. See generally Buxbaum,
Preferred Stock--Law and Draftsmanship, 42
Calif.L.Rev. 243, 298-309 (1954). When one
turns to the certificate of designation to
ascertain whether the language of Section
3.3(i) was intended to incorporate changes
effected through mergers, one is struck by
two factors that together compel the
conclusion that it was not. The first is the
close similarity between the operative
language of Section 3.3(i) and Section
242(b)(2) of the General Corporation Law.
The second involves a comparison of the
language of Section 3.3(i) with other
sections of the certificate of designation
in which the drafters of that document
specifically and expressly treated the
possibility of a future merger.
The language of Section 3.3(i) is
closely similar to the language of Section
242(b)(2) of the corporation law statute
governing amendments to a certificate of
incorporation. That section creates a right
to a class vote under certain circumstances.
It provides in pertinent part:
The holders of the outstanding
shares of a class shall be entitled to vote
as a class upon a proposed amendment ... if
the amendment would ... alter or change the
powers, preferences or special rights of the
shares of such class so as to affect them
adversely.
8 Del.C. § 242(b)(2) (emphasis
added).
The parallel language of Section
3.3(i), as quoted above, provides in
pertinent part:
... the affirmative vote of at least
two-thirds of the ... outstanding shares of
Series B Stock ... shall be necessary to
alter or change any rights, preferences or
limitations of the Preferred Stock so as to
affect the holders of all such stock
adversely.
Certificate of Designation,
Section 3.3 (emphasis added).
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1182] The
parallel is plain. It is therefore
significant, when called upon to determine
whether Section 3.3(i) creates a right to a
class vote on a merger, to note that the
language of Section 242(b)(2) does not
itself create a right to a class vote on a
merger. The voting requirements for a merger
are generally set forth in Section 251(c) of
our corporation law statute.
8
Under Section 251, unless a charter
provision creates a right to a class vote, a
merger is authorized by the company's
shareholders when "a majority of the
outstanding stock of the corporation
entitled to vote thereon shall be
Page 970 voted for the adoption of the agreement [of
merger]." 8 Del.C. § 251(c). Unlike Section
242(b), Section 251 contains no class vote
requirement.
Our bedrock doctrine of
independent legal significance (e.g., Orzeck
v. Englehart, Del.Supr.,
195 A.2d 375
(1963); Rothschild, supra ) compels the
conclusion that satisfaction of the
requirements of Section 251 is all that is
required legally to effectuate a merger. It
follows, therefore, from rudimentary
principles of corporation law, that the
language of 242(b)(2), which so closely
parallels the language of 3.3(i), does not
entitle the holders of a class of preferred
stock to a class vote in a merger, even if
(as we assume here) the interests of the
class will be adversely affected by the
merger.
9 See,
e.g., Dart v. Kohlberg, Kravis, Roberts &
Co., supra. Indeed, this is so apparent that
Chris-Craft does not argue that it has such
rights under Section 242.
Since I take this legal
conclusion to be the general understanding
among corporation law specialists (e.g.,
Buxbaum, 42 Calif.L.Rev. at 294, n. 266), I
can only conclude that it is extraordinarily
unlikely that the drafters of Section
3.3(i), who obviously were familiar with and
probably expert in our corporation law,
would have chosen language so closely
similar to that of Section 242(b)(2) had
they intended a merger to trigger the class
vote mechanism of that section.
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1183] This
conclusion is further supported by a review
of other provisions of the certificate of
designation. These provisions demonstrate
that the drafters were mindful of the
effects a merger might have and shaped some
special protections in light of the risks
posed. For example, Section 6.7 specifically
creates protections for the convertibility
feature of the Series B Preferred "... in
case of any consolidation or merger of the
Corporation with or into another
corporation...." More pointedly, the
drafters did expressly address the
possibility of a merger in connection with
the very question of a class vote by the
preferred and adopted the limited protection
afforded by Section 3.4(iii):
So long as any shares of Series B
Stock shall be outstanding ... without first
obtaining the consent or approval of the
holders of at least two-thirds of the number
of shares of the Series B Stock at the time
outstanding ... the Corporation shall not
... (iii) be a party to any transaction
involving a merger, consolidation or sale of
all or substantially all of the
Corporation's assets in which the shares of
Series B Stock either remain outstanding or
are converted into the right to receive
equity securities of the surviving,
resulting or acquiring corporation (meaning
the corporation whose securities are
delivered in exchange for assets or
securities of the Corporation) unless such
corporation shall have, after such merger,
consolidation or sale, no equity securities
either authorized or outstanding (except
such stock of the Corporation as may have
been authorized or outstanding immediately
preceding such merger or consolidation or
such stock of the surviving, resulting or
acquiring corporation as may be issued in
exchange therefor) ranking prior, as to
dividends or in liquidation, to the Series B
Stock or to the stock of the surviving,
resulting or acquiring corporation issued in
exchange therefor.
Certificate of Designation,
Section 3.4 (emphasis added).
Thus, in Section 3.4(iii), the
certificate of designation does specifically
address the voting requirements of a
corporate transaction that would "convert"
the Series B Preferred to the securities of
another corporation and creates a right to a
class vote in a subset of all such cases:
when the "surviving,
Page 971 resulting or acquiring corporation" has no
equity securities ranking prior to the
Series B Preferred except any securities
that ranked prior to it before the
transaction. The parties agree that Section
3.4(iii) does not require a class vote here.
[15 Del. J. Corp. L. 1184] This
section does not explicitly preclude the
possibility of a certificate-created
requirement for a class vote upon a merger
which does not insert prior equity into the
capital structure of the firm. Nevertheless,
the only fair inference from Section
3.4(iii) is that it was intended to provide
the only certificate-created requirement for
a series or class vote upon a merger.
Can Section 3.3(i) fairly be read
to contradict that obvious inference? Far
from contradicting it, the reading of that
section implied by the parallel with Section
242(b)(2) supports the conclusion that the
certificate of designation creates no right
for the Series B Preferred to a class vote
with respect to the proposed Warner-Time
merger.
I recognize that this
interpretation of Section 3.3(i) threatens
to render it redundant in light of Section
3.4(i).
10 An
interpretation that gives an effect to each
term of an agreement, instrument or statute
is to be preferred to an interpretation that
accounts for some terms as redundant.
However, no plausible interpretation of
Sections 3.3(i) and 3.4(i) and (iii) has
been suggested that would accomplish that
task here. Not only do I find implausible
any interpretation of Section 3.3(i) that
would extend its words to a merger in which
the Series B Preferred was converted into
another security, but such an
interpretation--while giving Section 3.3(i)
some room to operate--would render Section
3.4(iii) redundant. Thus, the problem of
redundancy seems inescapable.
* * * * * *
For these reasons, I conclude
that the Warner certificate of incorporation
does not afford to BHC, as the holder of the
Series B Preferred stock, a right to vote
upon the proposed Warner-Time merger as a
separate class. Plaintiffs may submit a form
of implementing order on notice.
1 A two-for-one stock split in 1986
resulted in a proportionate adjustment of
the original formula, which was the greater
of (a) $0.125 or (b) 100% of the regular
quarterly dividend, if any, on common stock.
2 These parties have not had harmonious
relations. See, e.g., Warner Communications
Inc., et al. v. Chris-Craft Industries,
Inc., et al., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 10817, 1989
WL 51662 (May 15, 1989).
3 The pleadings do not disclose, nor is
it pertinent for present purposes, just what
form that consideration will take.
4 That provision reads as follows:
The Corporation may issue the Preferred
Stock in series. The Board of Directors
shall have authority to establish and
designate each such series before issuance,
to distinguish the shares of each series
from shares of all other series, and to fix
the number of shares included in each such
series and, except as otherwise provided in
this Article, the variations in the relative
rights, preferences and limitations as
between series, provided that when the
stated dividends and amounts payable on
liquidation are not paid in full, the shares
of all series of Preferred Stock shall share
ratably in the payment of dividends
including accumulations, if any, in
accordance with the sums which would be
payable on such shares if all dividends were
declared and paid in full, and in any
distribution of assets other than by way of
dividends in accordance with the sums which
would be payable on such distribution if all
sums payable were discharged in full. ....
5 There is no claim that Section
242(b)(2), which does create a right to a
class vote when a charter amendment alters
or changes the rights of the shares of a
particular class of stock, itself creates a
right to a class vote on the merger.
6 For purposes of this motion, I assume
but do not decide that defendants are
correct that "any rights ... of Preferred
Stock" is not limited to those rights
necessarily shared by every series of
preferred stock because conferred in a
provision of the certificate of
incorporation of general applicability
(i.e., in this instance, the ratability
provision quoted in note 4), but would
extend to any rights of holders of preferred
stock (and perhaps varying rights with
respect to a single "matter"). It is
remarkable, in any event, how much overlap
exists between Sections 3.3(i) and 3.4(i).
The latter section is broader in several
respects--it covers all charter amendments,
not simply those altering the terms of
preferred stock; it covers bylaw amendments;
it includes adverse effects upon "holders"
as well as upon the stock.
7 In all events, it is agreed that
Section 3.3 was not negotiated by
Chris-Craft or BHC, but comes precisely from
the terms of prior issues of Warner
preferred stock.
8 But see 8 Del.C. § 251(f) (stating
narrow exceptions to voting requirement).
9 In Dalton v. American Investment
Company, Del.Ch.,
490 A.2d 574 (1985), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
501 A.2d 1238 (1985), this court
rejected a claim that because their shares
would be adversely affected by a merger, the
holders of a class of preferred stock were
entitled to a class vote. There the court
addressed the matter factually and found no
adverse effect. Dalton only accepted per
arguendo the theory that Section 242(b)(2)
created a right to a class vote on a merger
that would adversely affect preferred
shares; it would be an error, in my opinion,
to read that case as an implicit acceptance
of that theory.
10 It does not quite render Section
3.3(i) redundant as this case presents no
occasion to consider corporate transactions,
other than mergers and charter amendments,
that might arguably affect preferred stock
under Section 3.3(i). E.g., dissolution. |