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Page 678
600 F.Supp. 678
ENTERRA CORPORATION, et al.
v.
SGS ASSOCIATES, et al.
Grace WALLEN, et al.
v.
James M. BALLENGEE, et al. Civ. A. No. 84-2174. Civ. A. No. 84-4050. United States District Court, E.D.
Pennsylvania. January 9, 1985.
Page 679
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 680
Gregory M. Harvey, Marc J.
Sonnenfeld, David R. King, Kell M.
Damsgaard, Elizabeth L. Hoop, Morgan, Lewis
& Bockius, Philadelphia, Pa., for Enterra.
Irving R. Segal, Peter S.
Greenberg, Robert T. Vance, Jr., Schnader,
Harrison, Segal & Lewis, Philadelphia, Pa.,
and Herman Sassower, Bell, Kalnick, Beckman,
Klee & Green, New York City, for SGS
Associates.
Stuart H. Savett, Barbara A.
Podell, Kohn, Savett, Marion & Graff, P.C.,
Philadelphia, Pa., for Grace Wallen; Joseph
Weiss, New York City, of counsel.
Gregory M. Harvey, Marc J.
Sonnenfeld, Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, David
R. King, Kell M. Damsgaard, Philadelphia,
Pa., for James M. Ballengee.
MEMORANDUM
RAYMOND J. BRODERICK, District
Judge.
The above captioned cases are two
related securities actions which arise from
an unusual set of factual circumstances and
which present some rather novel legal
issues. The amended complaint in the
Enterra case (Civil Action No. 84-2174)
alleges, inter alia, that the
defendant partnership SGS Associates and its
individual partners (herein collectively
referred to as SGS), which is Enterra
Corporation's largest shareholder, violated
various federal and state securities laws in
connection with the defendants' negotiation,
execution, and subsequent alleged violation
of a "standstill agreement" with Enterra's
Board of Directors ("the Board"). The
standstill agreement provided, inter
alia, that SGS would not purchase or
acquire more than 15% of Enterra's
outstanding shares and would not make any
tender offers to Enterra's shareholders for
the purchase of Enterra stock. Enterra's
complaint also includes causes of action
against SGS for fraud, breach of contract,
and the currently popular allegation of a
violation of the Racketeer Influenced and
Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C.
§ 1961 et seq. Enterra seeks,
inter alia, permanent injunctive relief
prohibiting SGS from acquiring or offering
to acquire any shares of Enterra stock in
violation of the standstill agreement.
SGS (which notwithstanding its
standstill agreement with the Board, now
desires to have the opportunity to purchase
all of Enterra's outstanding shares) filed
various
Page 681
counterclaims against Enterra's directors
and has moved for a mandatory preliminary
injunction against the Board. SGS seeks an
order from this Court as follows:
(1) Enjoining the Board to
consider the adequacy of any proposal made
by defendants to purchase shares of Enterra;
(2) Enjoining the Board, within
ten (10) business days after receipt of a
proposal, to disclose in writing to
defendants its recommendation regarding the
proposal and all of the reasons therefor;
(3) Enjoining the Board, within
ten (10) business days after receipt of a
proposal and if the Board recommends against
acceptance of the proposal, to disclose in
writing to defendants all of the reasons for
such recommendation, including, without
limitation, its view of the adequacy of the
proposal from a financial standpoint; and
(4) Enjoining the Board, within
ten (10) business days after receipt of a
proposal and if the Board recommends against
acceptance of the proposal, to disclose in
writing to each shareholder of record the
fact and terms of the proposal and its
recommendation, and to allow each
shareholder to decide whether to accept or
reject the offer.
In support of its motion for a
mandatory preliminary injunction, SGS
contends that there exists a common law
fiduciary duty owed by the Board to the
shareholders which, notwithstanding the
standstill agreement, requires the Board to
(1) consider the adequacy of any SGS offer
to purchase Enterra shares; (2) disclose to
shareholders the facts and terms of the
offer along with the Board's analysis and
decision; and (3) convey the offer to the
shareholders and permit the shareholders to
accept or reject the SGS offer.
Subsequent to the filing of SGS'
counterclaims and motion for preliminary
injunction, the plaintiff in Wallen v.
Ballengee (Civil Action No. 84-4050)
filed a shareholders' derivative action
against the directors of Enterra Corporation
alleging, inter alia, that the Board
breached its fiduciary duty to the
corporation and shareholders by entering
into the standstill agreement which
restricted SGS' ability to purchase Enterra
stock. Wallen also has moved for a
preliminary injunction seeking relief
identical to the relief sought by SGS in its
motion. Wallen's motion is grounded upon the
same legal propositions advanced by SGS. A
consolidated argument on the motions for a
preliminary injunction was held before this
Court, and generally was directed to whether
or not the parties seeking the injunctive
relief against the Board had any reasonable
probability of succeeding on the merits of
the legal propositions underpinning the
requested relief. Indeed, at oral argument,
counsel for SGS characterized the issues
presented by the motions as purely issues of
law, in the nature of "summary judgment on
admitted facts." (Tr. of Oral Argument at
30, 61). For the reasons which follow, this
Court has determined that the motions filed
by SGS and Wallen seeking a mandatory
preliminary injunction against Enterra's
Board of Directors must be denied.
A. Background
The essential facts with respect
to the issues presented are not, for the
purposes of the motions for a preliminary
injunction, seriously disputed. Enterra is a
Pennsylvania corporation with its principal
place of business in Radnor, Pennsylvania.
Enterra's common stock is traded on the New
York and Philadelphia stock exchanges. As of
March 30, 1984, Enterra had approximately
nine million shares of common stock
outstanding held by approximately five
thousand shareholders of record. Enterra's
Board is composed of seven independent or
outside directors and three management or
inside directors, including its chairman and
president, James Ballengee. The individual
defendants in the Enterra case,
Philip Sassower, James Goren, and Lawrence
Schneider (who comprise the SGS Associates
partnership) are investors with considerable
experience in the field of corporate
investment.
In the spring of 1982, Sassower
and other members of SGS met with James
Ballengee,
Page 682
Enterra's chairman. The SGS group
indicated that its members had accumulated a
significant amount (nearly 5%) of Enterra's
common stock, and that they desired to
purchase additional Enterra shares.
Apparently, SGS' purchases had generated
significant market interest in Enterra
stock, including the anticipation of a
possible takeover bid, and the price of
Enterra's common stock had increased. This
rise in market price, of course, made it
more expensive for SGS to acquire additional
Enterra shares. At the time of the initial
meeting with Ballengee, SGS did not indicate
any desire to acquire control of Enterra,
but rather expressed an interest in
acquiring additional Enterra shares for
investment purposes.
Subsequent to this meeting, the
parties entered into negotiations which led
to the execution of a Standstill Agreement
(the Agreement) between Enterra and SGS on
November 30, 1982. The Agreement was
finalized only after considerable
negotiation by counsel representing both
parties, and after the preparation and
revision of several draft agreements. The
Agreement is thirty-four pages in length and
provides that it shall remain in effect
until November 30, 1992, subject to the
occurrence of certain contingencies not
applicable here. The provisions of the
Agreement pertinent to the issues presently
before the Court provide that, subject to
certain exceptions not applicable here, SGS
will not increase its holdings of Enterra
voting securities to more than 15% of those
outstanding; that SGS will not acquire or
offer to acquire any Enterra voting
securities by means of a tender offer; that
SGS will not publicly suggest or announce
its willingness or desire to make or have
another party make such a tender offer; that
SGS will not assist or participate in such
an offer made by any other party, and that
SGS will not recommend that any other party
commence a tender offer for Enterra voting
securities.
The terms of the Agreement were
disclosed by Enterra in a press release
issued in December of 1982, and in Enterra's
1983 and 1984 proxy statements mailed to
shareholders. By February of 1983, SGS had
acquired 5% of Enterra's outstanding shares,
and filed a Schedule 13D with the Securities
and Exchange Commission as required by 17
C.F.R. § 240.13d-1. Attached to the Schedule
13D was a copy of the standstill Agreement.
The Schedule 13D stated that the Enterra
shares had been acquired for the purpose of
investment, and that it was the intention of
SGS, subject to the terms of the Agreement,
to acquire additional shares of Enterra
stock. SGS filed several amendments to its
Schedule 13D in 1983 and 1984, reflecting
increases in its acquisitions of Enterra
shares.
Towards the latter part of 1983,
SGS requested Enterra's Board to amend the
Agreement in some respects, notably to
permit SGS to acquire greater than 15% of
the outstanding shares as set forth in the
Agreement. The Board declined to amend the
Agreement. At this time, the market price of
Enterra's shares was declining and relations
between SGS and the Board deteriorated
thereafter.
In February of 1984, SGS filed an
amendment to its Schedule 13D which stated,
inter alia, that it "had decided to
explore other alternatives that may be
available." At that time, Enterra's shares
were trading at approximately $16 per share.
On May 1, 1984, members of the SGS group met
with Enterra's chairman and requested that
the Agreement be amended to permit
acquisition of Enterra shares above the 15%
limit, and to permit greater participation
by SGS in Enterra's management. When
Enterra's chairman stated that the Board's
position on amending the Agreement was not
favorable, SGS presented him with a letter
dated May 1, 1984 which stated, inter
alia:
The SGS Group, with the approval
of the Enterra Corporation, hereby offers to
acquire for cash any and all outstanding
shares of Enterra at a price of $21 per
share. This offer is subject to the approval
of the Board of Enterra ... and execution of
an agreement incorporating terms and
conditions that would be mutually
Page 683
satisfactory to the SGS Group and
Enterra.
The letter requested a response
by May 9, 1984. On May 3, 1984, five
independent and three management directors
of Enterra's Board participated in a meeting
and considered the SGS proposal. The Board
considered the proposal and declined to
approve the offer or to amend the Agreement.
That afternoon, after counsel for SGS was
informed of the Board's decision, SGS filed
an amendment to its Schedule 13D which
included a copy of the May 1, 1984 letter
offering to acquire all of Enterra's shares.
There was an immediate disruption in the
trading market for Enterra stock, causing
the New York Stock Exchange to halt trading
of Enterra shares that day and causing a
delay in the opening of trading the
following day. On May 4, 1984, Enterra filed
the present action against SGS. On May 10,
1984, the entire Board of Enterra met at its
regularly scheduled meeting, together with
counsel and Enterra's financial advisor,
Merrill Lynch. The proposal submitted by SGS
again was considered and discussed. Merrill
Lynch advised the Board that the $21 per
share price offered by SGS was inadequate
from a financial point of view. The Board
determined that it was not in the best
interests of the corporation or the
shareholders to accept the SGS proposal at
that time or to amend the Agreement.
Currently, SGS owns close to 15%
of Enterra's outstanding shares. It is
undisputed that if SGS made an offer to
purchase all of Enterra's shares directly to
Enterra's shareholders, SGS would be in
violation of the Agreement. Absent the
Agreement, of course, SGS would be free (as
is any other party) to make a tender offer
for all of Enterra's shares. As of this
date, SGS has not made any such offer
directly to Enterra's shareholders,
presumably because it seeks to avoid the
risk of incurring liability for breach of
the Agreement. SGS and Wallen now contend,
however, that there exists a fiduciary duty
on the part of the Board, notwithstanding
the Agreement negotiated by SGS, to consider
the adequacy of any SGS offer; to relay the
terms of the offer and the Board's decision
to all shareholders; and most important, to
actually convey the offer to the
shareholders and provide the means by which
any shareholder can accept the offer and
sell his or her stock to SGS. SGS and Wallen
ask this Court to order the Board to do, on
behalf of SGS, that which SGS
contractually obligated itself not to
do that is, to make a tender offer for the
purchase of all Enterra stock. In effect,
granting the preliminary injunction would
enable SGS to "have its cake and eat it,
too," in that SGS would be permitted to
effectively convey its tender offer to
Enterra's shareholders, but since the offer
would be extended through the Board and not
made directly by SGS, SGS apparently would
avoid violating the terms of the Standstill
Agreement it signed with the Board.
B. Preliminary Injunction
Standards
In order to obtain a preliminary
injunction, the movant must (1) "make a
strong showing that it is likely to prevail
on the merits" and (2) "show that without
such relief [the movant] would be
irreparably injured."
Klitzman, Klitzman & Gallagher v. Krut,
744 F.2d 955, 958-59 (3d Cir.1984).
While the burden rests upon the moving party
to make these two requisite showings, the
district court also must take into account,
where relevant, the possibility of harm to
other interested persons resulting from the
grant or denial of injunction, as well as
the public's interest in the matter. Id;
Continental Group, Inc. v. Amoco Chemicals
Corp.,
614 F.2d 351, 356-57 (3d Cir.1980);
Constructor's
Association of Western Pennsylvania v.
Kreps,
573 F.2d 811, 814-15 (3d Cir.1978);
Oburn v. Shapp, 521 F.2d 142, 147 (3d
Cir.1975); Regional Scaffolding &
Hoisting Co., Inc. v. City of Philadelphia,
et al, 593 F.Supp. 529, 534
(E.D.Pa.1984). The Third Circuit has
emphasized that both the likelihood
of success on the merits of the legal claim
and irreparable harm must be demonstrated by
the party seeking the injunction, and that a
failure by the moving party to satisfy
either of these two prerequisite
Page 684
showings "must necessarily result in the
denial of the preliminary injunction." In
Re Arthur Treacher's Franchisee Litigation,
689 F.2d 1137, 1143 (3d Cir.1982). See
also Moteles v. University of Pennsylvania,
et al, 730 F.2d 913 (3d Cir.1984). In
deciding a motion for a preliminary
injunction, the district court has broad
discretion, since its task involves "a
delicate balancing of the probabilities of
ultimate success at the final hearing with
the consequences of immediate irreparable
injury that possibly could flow from the
denial of preliminary relief."
Klitzman, Klitzman & Gallagher v. Krut,
744 F.2d at 958;
Continental Group, Inc. v. Amoco
Chemicals Corp., 614 F.2d at 357.
The movants herein have requested
this Court to enter a mandatory
preliminary injunction against the Board. It
is well-settled that "[t]he power to issue a
preliminary injunction, especially a
mandatory one, should be sparingly
exercised,"
United States v. Spectro Foods
Corporation, 544 F.2d 1175, 1181 (3d
Cir.1976), and the Third Circuit has
cautioned that "when the preliminary
injunction is directed not merely at
preserving the status quo but, as in this
case, providing mandatory relief, the burden
on the moving party is particularly heavy."
Punnett v. Carter, 621 F.2d 578, 582
(3d Cir.1980).
United States v. Price, 688 F.2d 204,
212 (3d Cir.1982) (mandatory injunctions
should be used sparingly);
Sovereign Order of St. John of Jerusalem
Knights of Malta v. Messineo, 572
F.Supp. 983, 988-89 (E.D.Pa.1983)
("Mandatory preliminary injunctions, which
seek to alter the status quo, are normally
granted only in those circumstances where
the exigencies of the situation demand such
relief and the facts and the law are clearly
in favor of the moving party.").
C. The Movants' Legal Claims
The implication of the legal
theory advanced in support of the motions
for a preliminary injunction is that despite
the existence of a standstill agreement
between a corporation and a substantial
shareholder, if at any time the contracting
shareholder decides to attempt to acquire an
amount of the corporation's stock in excess
of the agreed-upon limit, the corporation,
acting through its board of directors, must
nevertheless consider the investor's offer,
advise the shareholders of the offer, and
give the shareholders the opportunity to
accept or reject the offer. The movants'
claim thus calls into question whether,
notwithstanding the existence of a
standstill agreement limiting the percentage
of the corporation's stock which the
investor may acquire, a board of directors
has a fiduciary duty to advise the
shareholders of any offer received from the
investor to purchase the corporation's stock
in excess of the limitation provided in the
agreement, and to give the shareholders the
opportunity to accept or reject the offer.
Before addressing this issue, it is
appropriate to review some basic principles
of corporate law.
1. Directors' Fiduciary Duty
and the Business Judgment Rule
In Pennsylvania, as in most
jurisdictions, officers and directors of a
corporation stand in a fiduciary relation to
the corporation, and must discharge the
duties of their positions in good faith and
with the diligence, care, and skill which
ordinarily prudent persons would exercise
under similar circumstances. 15
Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 1404 (Purdon's
Supp.1984); Brown v. Presbyterian
Ministers' Fund, 484 F.2d 998, 1004 (3d
Cir.1973);
United States v. Gleneagles Investment
Co., Inc.,
565 F.Supp. 556, 589
(M.D.Pa.1983);
Bellis v. Thal, 373 F.Supp. 120
(E.D.Pa.1974);
Wolf v. Fried, 473 Pa. 26, 373 A.2d
734 (1977). These fiduciary obligations
have sometimes been described as the duty of
care, i.e., the responsibility of the
fiduciary to exercise the care that a
reasonably prudent person in a similar
position would use under similar
circumstances, and the duty of loyalty,
i.e., the duty not to take advantage of the
fiduciary relationship by engaging in
self-dealing. See Norlin Corporation v.
Rooney, Pace Inc., et al., 744 F.2d 255,
264 (2d
Page 685
Cir.1984);
Seaboard Industries, Inc. v. Monaco,
442 Pa. 256, 276 A.2d 305 (1971).
It is the directors, and not the
shareholders, who must manage the business
affairs of the corporation, and the
directors of a corporation "have the power
to bind [the corporation] by any contract
which is within its express or implied
powers, and which in their judgment is
necessary or proper in order to carry out
the objectives for which the corporation was
created ... without consulting with or
obtaining the consent of the stockholders."
2 W. Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of
Private Corporations, § 505, pp. 515-16
(rev. perm. ed. 1981). See also,
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
297 U.S. 288, 343, 56 S.Ct. 466, 481, 80
L.Ed. 688 (1936) (Brandeis, J.,
concurring); Matter of Penn Central
Transportation Co., 596 F.2d 1155, 1166
(3d Cir.1979);
Severance v. Heyl & Patterson, 123
Pa.Super. 553, 187 A. 53 (1936);
Auerbach v. Bennett, 47 N.Y.2d 619,
629-31, 419 N.Y.S.2d 920, 393 N.E.2d 994
(1979).
It is an axiomatic principle of
corporate law that "[c]ourts are reluctant
to interfere in the internal management of a
corporation" at the behest of a shareholder,
Wolf v. Fried, 373 A.2d at 734,
and that "[shareholders] cannot secure the
aid of a court to correct ... mistakes of
judgment on the part of the [directors]."
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
297 U.S. at 343, 56 S.Ct. at 481
(Brandeis, J., concurring). In discharging
their fiduciary duties to the corporation,
the directors are protected against
unwarranted interference from complaining
shareholders by the "business judgment
rule". The business judgment rule provides
that directors are not liable to the
corporation for mistakes in judgment,
whether those mistakes are characterized as
mistakes of fact or mistakes of law.
See Briggs v. Spaulding, 141 U.S.
132, 11 S.Ct. 924, 35 L.Ed. 662 (1891);
Cramer v. General Telephone & Electronics
Corp., 582 F.2d 259, 274-75 (3d
Cir.1978);
Selheimer v. Manganese Corporation of
America, 423 Pa. 563, 224 A.2d 634
(1966). If the shareholders conclude
that the judgment of the directors in
pursuing a particular course of action is
not sound, their remedy lies in the
replacement of the directors through the
corporate voting process they may vote the
management out. See M. Lipton,
Takeover Bids and the Targets' Boardroom,
35 Bus.Law. 101, 116 (1979).
One commentator recently has
described the business judgment rule as
follows:
Courts review the decisions of
corporate directors under the business
judgment rule. According to the rule,
directors' decisions are presumed to be
based on sound business judgment; this
presumption can be rebutted only by a
showing of fraud, bad faith, or gross
overreaching. Courts are willing to defer to
directors because it is the board's duty to
manage the affairs of the corporation and
because courts often consider themselves
ill-equipped to second-guess business
decisions. The presumption of sound business
judgment allows the directors to prevail
whenever they can articulate a rational,
unselfish business purpose for their
actions.
Note, Protecting Shareholders
Against Partial and Two-Tiered Takeovers:
The "Poison Pill" Preferred, 97
Harv.L.Rev. 1964, 1969 (1984) (footnotes
omitted) (hereinafter cited as "Harvard
L.Rev. Note"). It has been held that the
presumption of good faith and sound judgment
afforded by the business judgment rule is
heightened where the majority of the board
consists of independent, outside directors
and where the directors have obtained and
considered expert legal and business advice.
Panter v. Marshall Field & Co., 646
F.2d 271, 277, 294 (7th Cir.), cert.
denied, 454 U.S. 1092, 102 S.Ct. 658, 70
L.Ed.2d 631 (1981). See also J.
Bartlett & C. Andrews, The Standstill
Agreement: Legal and Business Considerations
Underlying a Corporate Peace Treaty, 62
B.U.L.Rev. 143, 150 & n. 25 (1982).
If it is established that a board
of directors has acted in fraud, bad faith,
or self-interest, the presumption of the
business judgment rule does not apply, and
the
Page 686
directors bear the burden of showing that
the transaction was fair and served a
legitimate corporate purpose. Harvard L.Rev.
Note, supra, 97 Harv.L.Rev. at 1969;
Wolf v. Fried, 373 A.2d at 736 n. 8.
However, as the Third Circuit has noted, "by
the very nature of corporate life a director
has a certain amount of self-interest in
everything he does," and that "[the desire
to retain] control [of the corporation] is
always arguably a motive in any action taken
by a director."
Johnson v. Trueblood, 629 F.2d 287,
292 (3d Cir.1980), cert. denied,
450 U.S. 999, 101 S.Ct. 1704, 68 L.Ed.2d 200
(1981). Accordingly, in order to overcome
the presumption of the business judgment
rule, "the plaintiff must make a showing
that the sole or primary motive of [the
directors] was to retain control." Id.
at 293 (applying Delaware law).
Panter v. Marshall Field & Co., 646
F.2d at 294;
Heit v. Baird, 567 F.2d 1157, 1161
(1st Cir.1977);
Warner Communications, Inc. v. Murdoch,
581 F.Supp. 1482, 1491 (D.Del.1984).
Even those commentators who disagree with
the application of the rule's presumption in
certain circumstances agree that "[c]urrent
case law ... places the burden on the
plaintiff to show that management's sole or
primary purpose [in taking the challenged
action] was retention of control." Note,
The Standstill Agreement: A Case of Illegal
Vote Selling and Breach of Fiduciary Duty,
93 Yale L.J. 1093, 1110 n. 77 (1984)
(hereinafter cited as "Yale L.J. Note").
See also Bartlett & Andrews, supra,
62 B.U.L.Rev. at 148. Although there appear
to be no reported Pennsylvania decisions
applying the business judgment rule to
"defensive" actions taken by corporate
directors in anticipation of or in
opposition to a takeover bid, there is no
reason to believe (and the parties do not
contend) that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
would not follow the prevailing
interpretation of the business judgment rule
in such circumstances.
A "target" corporation's decision
to accept or resist a takeover bid
(generally manifested as a tender offer)
necessarily rests with the board of
directors, since it is the directors, and
not the shareholders, who are best able to
evaluate the numerous and often complex
financial factors which must be considered
in determining whether the takeover proposal
serves the best interests of the
corporation. See generally Lipton,
supra, 35 Bus.Law 101 (1979). See
also W. Steinbrink, Management's
Response to the Takeover Attempt, 28
Case. W.L.Rev. 882, 891 (1978). The wave of
corporate takeover attempts in recent years
has spawned sufficient litigation to
establish that the fiduciary duty of
corporate directors "to act in the best
interests of the corporation's shareholders
... requires the directors to attempt to
block takeovers that would [in their
judgment] be harmful to the target company."
Harvard L.Rev. Note, supra, 97
Harv.L.Rev. at 1968.
See Panter v. Marshall Field & Co.,
646 F.2d at 299 (directors are obliged
to oppose tender offers deemed to be
"detrimental to the well-being of the
corporation even if that [opposition] is at
the expense of the short term interests of
individual shareholders.");
Treadway Companies, Inc. v. Care Corp.,
638 F.2d 357, 381 (2d Cir.1980);
Heit v. Baird, 567 F.2d at 1161
("management has not only the right but the
duty to resist by all lawful means persons
whose attempt to win control of the
corporation, if successful, would harm the
corporate enterprise."); cf. Norlin Corp.
v. Rooney, Pace Inc., et al., 744 F.2d
at 264, 266 (business judgment rule "affords
directors wide latitude in devising
strategies to resist unfriendly advances,"
and where the directors determine that the
interests of the corporation and its
shareholders might be jeopardized, they may
take any fair and reasonable actions
necessary to thwart an acquisition attempt).
Courts applying the business
judgment rule have upheld a wide variety of
sometimes drastic defensive tactics
undertaken by a target company to prevent a
takeover bid, including the sale of large
blocks of treasury stock to "friendly"
purchasers; acquisitions designed to make
the target less attractive or create
antitrust obstacles for the offeror; and the
institution of antitrust or securities
litigation by the target
Page 687
company against the offeror in an effort
to block the takeover. Bartlett & Andrews,
supra, 62 B.U.L.Rev. at 148-50
(citing cases). It is well-established that
such "[d]efensive tactics are illegitimate
only if a target's management fails to
exercise its business judgment and engages
in such tactics for the primary purpose of
entrenchment."
Warner Communications, Inc. v. Murdoch,
581 F.Supp. at 1491.
2. The Validity of the
Standstill Agreement
With these basic principles of
corporate law in mind, the Court will now
consider the movants' particular legal
claims. Although SGS understandably is
reluctant to ask this Court to declare that
the standstill agreement which SGS sought,
negotiated, and signed with Enterra is
invalid and may be disregarded, plaintiff
Wallen contends that the Board breached its
fiduciary duty to the shareholders in
entering into the Agreement, which by its
terms restricts SGS' rights to purchase
Enterra stock. Wallen contends that a board
of directors cannot agree to limit its duty
to convey all offers received by the board
to purchase the corporation's stock to the
shareholders by utilizing the "defensive"
mechanism of a standstill agreement.
The use of standstill agreements
is a relatively recent corporate development
which has received generally favorable
reactions from the commentators. See
generally, Bartlett & Andrews, supra,
62 B.U. L.Rev. 143 (1982); K. Bialkin,
The Use of Standstill Agreements in
Corporate Transactions, 373 P.L.I. 91,
94-108 (1981); A. Fleischer & D. Sternberg,
Corporate Acquisitions, 12
Rev.Sec.Reg. 937 (1979). This Court is
advised that standstill agreements have been
reached between the board of directors and a
substantial investor in approximately fifty
publicly-traded corporations in the last
several years. The standstill agreement is
"in essence, a corporate peace treaty,
designed to inject a degree of stability,
certainty, and cooperation into the
relationship between an issuer and a major
investor." Bartlett & Andrews, supra,
62 B.U.L.Rev. at 144. The typical standstill
agreement serves to relieve the antagonism,
suspicion, and hostility which, in this era
of corporate takeover bids, often exists
between a corporation and a substantial
shareholder. The essential provision of a
standstill agreement is a limitation,
usually expressed as a percentage figure, on
the shareholder's holding of the
corporation's stock, and generally prohibits
the shareholder from making any tender
offers for the corporation's stock during
the terms of the agreement. Such agreements
may also restrict the shareholders' ability
to transfer the corporation's shares by
affording the corporation a right of first
refusal. By entering into such agreements,
the directors ensure that the relationship
between the corporation and an investor who
has been purchasing significant blocks of
stock will be clearly governed and defined.
Such agreements also serve to avoid the
unsettling impact on the corporation's
business and workforce which could result
from anticipation on the part of customers,
shareholders, and employees that a takeover
bid may be imminent. The corporation may
seek to avert a costly control fight with
the contracting shareholder by arriving at a
negotiated understanding in advance of an
anticipated bid for control. The corporation
may also seek to "lock up" a significant
block of stock with a "friendly" shareholder
in the event that a third party attempts a
takeover that the board believes is not in
the corporation's best interest to accept.
The contracting shareholder, in
return, receives assurance that the
corporation will not oppose its acquisitions
up to the specified limit. Often an
investor's substantial purchases of the
corporation's stock initially will cause the
market price of the stock to rise, and it
becomes more costly for the investor to
acquire additional stock. The investor may
therefore seek to clearly set forth its
"investment-only" intentions in order to
dispel any anticipation of a tender offer
and reduce the market price for the
corporation's stock. In entering into a
standstill agreement, the investor may seek
input into management decisions, and may
Page 688
also obtain certain valuable securities
registration rights from the corporation.
See Bartlett & Andrews, supra, 62
B.U.L.Rev. at 144-46; Yale L.J. Note,
supra, 93 Yale L.J. at 1094-97 & n. 11.
Because the primary purpose of a standstill
agreement usually is to create a stable and
"absolutely certain" relationship between
the contracting parties, the "situation ...
calls for a very formal, binding, and
judicially enforceable contract." Yale L.J.
Note, supra, 93 Yale L.J. at 1093 n.
78.
The application of the business
judgment rule discussed above leads one to
conclude that where "a valid corporate
purpose [for executing a standstill
agreement] exists and if management has
consulted appropriate legal and business
advisors before concluding the agreement,"
courts should not "second-guess management's
judgment that the corporation would benefit
from an extended period of corporate peace."
Bartlett & Andrews, supra, 62
B.U.L.Rev. at 150. See also, Yale
L.J. Note, supra, 93 Yale L.J. at
1097, 1112 n. 86 (standstill agreements "are
useful in regulating relations between
management and a substantial shareholder"
and may bring "order and reliability to a
relationship that was previously ambiguous
and uncertain."). This Court's attention has
not been called to any decision challenging
the general validity of standstill
agreements or the directors' right (indeed,
their duty) to execute such an agreement if
in their judgment the best interests of the
corporation are served thereby. Although
this Court would be inclined to challenge
the validity of any provision in a
standstill agreement requiring the
shareholder to vote with management on any
material matter, see Yale L.J. Note,
supra, 93 Yale L.J. 1093 (1984), in
this case the Agreement's voting provisions
are not at issue.
As noted above, no court has
determined or even suggested that a
standstill agreement such as the one
negotiated by Enterra and SGS constitutes a
breach of the directors' fiduciary duty to
the corporation and the shareholder. In
General Portland, Inc. v. Lafarge Coppee
S.A., Nos. C.A. 3-81-1060D and C.A.
3-81-1082D, slip op., (N.D.Tex.1981),
reprinted in Fed.Sec. L.Rep. (CCH) (
99, 148) [1982-83 Transfer Binder at 95,
537], the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Texas issued an
injunction prohibiting an anticipated tender
offer by the defendant on the ground that
the corporation was likely to succeed on the
merits of its claim that in making its
tender offer the defendant would breach a
valid, binding, and enforceable standstill
agreement. Id. at 95, 542.
In Biechele, et al. v. Cedar
Point, Inc., et al, 747 F.2d 209 (6th
Cir.1984), the court held that as a matter
of law a standstill agreement between the
defendant corporation and a "friendly" third
party (Pearson) did not constitute an
unlawful manipulative device under the
federal securities laws, and stated
The standstill agreement fixed no
price for any purchase of Cedar Point stock
by Pearson or anyone else... There were no
competing bidders for the minority interest
in Cedar Point which Pearson sought. While
the agreement had the practical effect of
... conditionally ensuring continued control
by Cedar Point's board of directors, it
would not inhibit third party bidders if
they were otherwise interested... The effect
of the agreement would be to encourage
rather than inhibit, competitive bidding.
Biechele, 747 F.2d at 216.
Compare Gearhart Industries, Inc. v.
Smith International, Inc.,
741 F.2d 707
(5th Cir.1984) (court appeared to
assume, without detailed analysis, the
general validity of an alleged oral
standstill agreement).
As noted above, the actions of a
board of directors in managing the affairs
of the corporation are governed by the
business judgment rule. In the present case,
the affidavit submitted by Enterra's
chairman sets forth numerous valid corporate
purposes supporting the directors'
negotiation and approval of the Agreement,
which are primarily related to the potential
adverse effect upon the corporation which
SGS' initial significant purchases of
Enterra's stock may have generated.
According
Page 689
to the affidavit, the Board, acting in
part upon the advice of counsel and
Enterra's financial advisors, determined
that it was in the best interests of the
corporation to execute the Agreement because
the stability created by the Agreement would
provide numerous benefits to the
corporation, including the retention (and
recruitment) of key employees; allaying the
"takeover" concerns of (and stabilizing
relations with) various suppliers,
customers, and lenders; settling the trading
market for Enterra stock; and preserving the
Board's ability to sell the corporation (if
at all) at a time and in a manner which is
in the best interests of the corporation and
all shareholders. At the time the Agreement
was negotiated and executed, SGS had not
indicated a desire to obtain control of the
corporation, nor is there any indication
that any third party has at any time been
interested in acquiring the corporation.
Enterra's shareholders were promptly
informed of the existence and substance of
the Agreement. Although, as with all actions
taken by a board of directors, retention of
control arguably was a motive for
entering into the Agreement, it is clear
that the primary purpose of the Board
(which, as noted, includes a majority of
independent directors) was to "create a
stable, certain, and cooperative
relationship between management a
substantial shareholder." Yale L.J. Note,
supra, 93 Yale L.J. at 1096-97. The
Board thereafter declined to amend the
Agreement to permit SGS to offer to purchase
all the shareholders' stock because the
Board, in its judgment, considered the offer
price financially inadequate. These
undisputably are valid business reasons for
entering into and declining to amend the
Agreement, and, accordingly, this Court has
determined that the movants have not
demonstrated any reasonable likelihood of
success on the merits of their claim that
the Board breached its fiduciary duty to the
corporation or the shareholders by executing
the Agreement with SGS.
3. Alleged Duty to Convey All
Offers to Shareholders
As noted above, the movants
contend that, notwithstanding the provisions
of the standstill Agreement there exists a
common law fiduciary duty to (1) consider
the adequacy of SGS' offer to buy all of
Enterra's shares; (2) communicate that offer
to Enterra's shareholders, together with the
Board's decision to approve or disapprove
the offer and its reasons therefore; and (3)
provide some means by which each shareholder
actually may accept SGS' offer and sell
their shares to SGS. A necessary implication
of the movants' claim is that the Agreement
negotiated by SGS cannot relieve the Board
of its obligation to communicate and
convey SGS' offer to the shareholders.
At the outset, it appears that
SGS may not have standing to assert the
shareholders' alleged right to be
apprised of and to receive the offer
presented by SGS to the Board. An alleged
breach of fiduciary duty on the part of the
directors which is asserted on behalf of all
shareholders or the entire corporation
(whereby each shareholder suffers an
indirect loss in common with other
shareholders) must be maintained as a
derivative action and cannot be asserted by
individual shareholders in their own right.
Davis v. United States Gypsum Co.,
451 F.2d 659, 662 (3d Cir.1971);
Fitzpatrick v. Shay, 314 Pa.Super.
450, 455-56, 461 A.2d 243, 246 (1983).
Gearhart Industries, Inc. v. Smith
International, Inc.,
741 F.2d 707 (5th
Cir.1984), the court noted that a
substantial shareholder who was attempting
to purchase a controlling block of the
corporation's stock had no standing to
assert a breach of fiduciary duty claim
against the directors for various actions
taken by the directors to oppose the
shareholder's takeover bid. The court stated
that such claims must be brought by way of a
derivative action. 741 F.2d at 721. However,
since plaintiff Wallen has brought a
derivative action and seeks the same
injunctive relief as SGS, this Court will
address the merits of their claims.
For the purposes of the motions
for a preliminary injunction, it is not
disputed
Page 690
that the Board considered the adequacy of
the SGS offer (and, necessarily, SGS'
request to amend the Agreement), and at oral
argument counsel for SGS did not contend
that the Board had not properly considered
the proposal (Tr. of Oral Argument at 61).
The affidavit submitted by the chairman of
Enterra's Board states that the SGS offer
was considered on two occasions by the
Board, and, relying in part upon the advice
of Enterra's financial advisor (Merrill
Lynch) that the offer was financially
inadequate, the Board determined that it was
not in the best interests of the corporation
to accept the proposal or modify the
Agreement. Therefore, assuming that the
Board had a fiduciary obligation to the
corporation and shareholders to consider in
good faith the adequacy of the SGS proposal,
it is clear that the Board fulfilled that
responsibility. The movants do not contend
that the Board's refusal to approve the SGS
offer was wrongful or constituted any breach
of duty.
The movants also claim that after
deciding to reject the SGS proposal, the
Board had a fiduciary responsibility to
inform all shareholders of the terms of
the SGS offer and the reasons for the
Board's decision not to approve the offer.
Ordinarily, of course, an offeror which has
been rejected by the board of directors in
its efforts to acquire control of the
corporation is free to communicate its offer
to any and all shareholders by tender offer
or otherwise. Thus, ordinarily, there is no
need for the directors to disclose the terms
of any rejected offer or the substance of
any negotiations because the offeror has
unfettered access to the shareholders.
However, since SGS is restrained by the
terms of its Agreement with the Board from
approaching the shareholders with an offer
to purchase their shares, the movants
contend that the Board is under a fiduciary
obligation to disclose the terms of the
offer (and the Board's decision) to the
shareholders. The movants have cited no
authority under federal or state law in
support of their claim that a board of
directors must disclose to all shareholders
every offer to purchase all the
corporation's shares.
Recently, the Third Circuit has
held that there exists no obligation under
Section 10(b) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. § 78j(b)), and Rule 10b-5
(17 C.F.R. § 240.10b-5) for a "target"
corporation to disclose the status of offers
or negotiations between the board and a
"hostile suitor" attempting to take over the
corporation unless and until an "agreement
in principle" (e.g., to transfer control or
effect a merger) has been reached.
Greenfield v. Heublein, Inc., et al.,
742 F.2d 751, 756-57 (3d Cir.1984);
Staffin v. Greenberg,
672 F.2d 1196
(3d Cir.1982). No such agreement, of
course, was reached in this case. Under the
Williams Act, 15 U.S.C. § 78n(d) & (e),
Enterra would be required to take certain
actions if SGS had made a tender
offer bid to all shareholders to acquire
Enterra's outstanding shares. However, SGS
has not made any tender offer, and the
provisions of the Williams Act are
inapplicable. Indeed, the movants do not
contend that the provisions of the Williams
Act (or any federal or state securities
statute) provide the legal basis of their
claim for relief.
Under Pennsylvania law, a
corporate board of directors must submit a
proposal to merge or consolidate to the
shareholders for approval only if the board
has approved the proposal. 15
Pa.Cons.Stat.Ann. § 1902 (Purdon's
Supp.1984). In this case, of course, the
Board has not approved any SGS proposal.
Counsel for Enterra has cited a number of
decisions holding that "[d]irectors are
under no [fiduciary] duty to reveal [to
shareholders] every approach by a would-be
acquiror or merger partner."
Panter v. Marshall Field & Co., 646
F.2d at 296.
Pogostin v. Rice,
480 A.2d 619
(Del.Supr.Ct.1984) (directors' refusal
to accept tender offer at premium above
market price per share, and refusal to
negotiate with offeror, does not establish a
prima facie case of breach of fiduciary
duty). At least one commentator has stated
that there is no obligation on the part of
directors to pass on to shareholders the
right to accept or reject takeover offers
Page 691
submitted to and rejected by the board.
Lipton, supra, 35 Bus.Law. at 116.
The weight of all these
authorities strongly suggests that the Board
was under no duty imposed by any federal,
state, or common law standard to communicate
the terms of the SGS proposal (and the
Board's decision to reject it) to Enterra's
shareholders. Under the peculiar
circumstances of this case, wherein SGS has
bound itself not to present an offer to
purchase the corporation's stock in excess
of the limit provided for in the Agreement
directly to the shareholders, it may well be
that there was no obligation on the part of
the Board to inform the shareholders of SGS'
proposal and the Board's reasons for
rejecting it. However, assuming without
deciding that the Board was obliged, under
the circumstances of this case, to convey
this information to the shareholders, the
movants' request that this Court order the
Board to do so has been rendered moot by
Enterra's publication of its 1984 Second
Quarterly Report (sent to all shareholders),
wherein Enterra's Chairman briefly describes
the SGS proposal, the Board's reason for
rejecting it, and the status of this
litigation.
It is apparent that much of the
relief requested by the movants in their
motions for a preliminary injunction (i.e.,
that the Board consider the adequacy of the
SGS proposal, and that the Board disclose
the terms of the proposal and the basis for
its decision to reject it) is no longer at
issue. However, although the movants rely
heavily upon the shareholders' alleged
"right to know" of the Board's determination
of the SGS proposal, clearly the movants'
primary interest lies in obtaining an order
from this Court which would effectively
convey SGS' offer to Enterra's shareholders
without fear that SGS will incur liability
for breach of the standstill agreement. The
movants contend that the Board's
consideration and disclosure of the SGS
proposal are not sufficient, and that the
Board itself is obliged to extend, on behalf
of SGS, the SGS offer to all of Enterra's
shareholders and provide a means by which
each shareholder can accept or reject the
SGS offer. The movants contend that as an
absolute principle of corporate law (and
notwithstanding any agreements to the
contrary) no board of directors can fail to
convey to the shareholders an offer
received by the board to purchase the
shareholders' stock.
The movants have not cited, nor
has this Court discovered, any federal or
state statute (or any common law authority)
which requires the board of directors to
convey to all shareholders (and permit
them to accept or reject) any offer for the
purchase of all the shareholders' stock
where, as in the present case, the offeror
and the corporation have entered into a
standstill agreement limiting the percentage
of the corporation's stock which the offeror
can acquire. As noted above, it may well be
that the Board is not even obliged to simply
inform the shareholders of the offer.
Accordingly, this Court therefore has
determined at this stage of the proceedings
that no reasonable likelihood of success on
the merits of the movants' legal claim has
been demonstrated.
This Court has concluded, for all
of the reasons set forth above, that the
movants have not demonstrated any reasonable
likelihood of success on the merits of their
legal claims. The motions for preliminary
injunctive relief, therefore, must be denied
on this basis alone.
D. Irreparable Injury and the
Equity Factors
As heretofore pointed out, in
addition to demonstrating a likelihood of
success on the merits of its legal claim, a
party seeking a preliminary injunction also
must show that absent the relief requested,
it will suffer irreparable injury. In this
case, the movants have not demonstrated that
they would suffer any irreparable injury,
absent injunctive relief, as a result of the
Board's alleged breach of fiduciary duty.
The Third Circuit has held that a district
court should not "exercise the delicate
power of injunctive relief" absent a "clear
showing of immediate irreparable injury."
Ammond v. McGahn, 532 F.2d
Page 692
325, 329 (3d Cir.1976). An alleged
ongoing financial loss cannot support a
claim for preliminary injunctive relief,
because "the injury must be of a peculiar
nature, so that compensation in money alone
cannot atone for it." In Re Arthur
Treacher's Franchisee Litigation, 689
F.2d at 1146. The movants have not shown
that any injury suffered as a result of the
Board's actions could not ultimately be
compensated in damages. In the context of
shareholder derivative suits, courts have
refused to grant injunctive relief to
shareholders who allege that actions taken
by the directors have deprived them of an
opportunity to accept a tender offer, see
FMC Corp. v. R.P. Scherer Corp., 545
F.Supp. 318, 322 (D.Del.1982), or who allege
that actions taken by the Board have
diminished the value of their holdings,
see Northwest Industries, Inc. v. B.F.
Goodrich Co., 301 F.Supp. 706, 711
(N.D.Ill.1969), on the ground that any
financial injury ultimately suffered by the
shareholders can be adequately compensated
by a damages award.
Furthermore, the Court has
considered the interest of third parties and
the public in the grant or denial of the
requested injunctive relief, and has
determined that the equities clearly weigh
in favor of denying the requested
injunction. As noted above, standstill
agreements have generally been recognized as
valid contracts for achieving a measure of
stability between a corporation and a
substantial investor, and many such
agreements are currently in effect and
presumed to be valid and binding. If this
Court were to grant the relief requested by
the movants, the validity and enforceability
of all such agreements would be cast into
doubt. The resultant disruption of the
relations between corporations and their
major shareholders, as well as the possible
disruption of the trading market for
securities of those corporations which have
entered into such agreements, clearly would
not be in the best interests of the parties
to those agreements or to the public.
Conclusion
For all of the reasons set forth
above, this Court has determined that Wallen
and SGS have failed to satisfy the burden
necessary to justify the issuance of
mandatory injunctive relief. The movants
have failed to demonstrate any reasonable
likelihood of success on the merits of their
legal claims, and have failed to demonstrate
the immediate threat of irreparable injury
necessary to sustain the grant of a
preliminary injunction. Moreover, the Court
has determined that the interests of third
parties and the public would not be well
served by granting the requested injunctive
relief. Accordingly, the motions for a
preliminary injunction filed by defendant
SGS in the Enterra case, and by
plaintiff Wallen in the Wallen case,
must be denied. |