| Page 468 611 F.Supp. 468
ASARCO INCORPORATED, a New Jersey
corporation, Plaintiff,
v.
M.R.H. Holmes A COURT, Weeks Petroleum Ltd.,
a Bermuda corporation, Bell Resources Ltd.,
a Western Australia corporation, PRT Records
Pty. Ltd., a New South Wales corporation,
Associated Broadcasting Development Co.
Ltd., a United Kingdom corporation,
Associated Communications Corp., a United
Kingdom corporation, TVW (U.K.) Ltd., a
United Kingdom corporation, Group Color
(W.A.) Pty. Ltd., a Western Australia
corporation, TVW Enterprises Ltd., a Western
Australia corporation, Maranoa Transport
Pty. Ltd., a Queensland corporation, Bell
Group Ltd., a Western Australia corporation,
Heytesbury Securities Pty. Ltd., a Western
Australia corporation, and Heytesbury
Holdings Ltd., a Western Australia
corporation, Defendants.
and
WEEKS PETROLEUM LIMITED, a Bermuda
corporation, Defendant-counterclaimant,
v.
ASARCO INCORPORATED, a New Jersey
corporation, Plaintiff-counterclaim
Defendant,
M.I.M. Holdings Limited, a Queensland,
Australia, corporation, Ralph L. Hennebach,
Willard C. Butcher, Fletcher L. Byrom, John
L. Clendenin, David C. Garfield, Alexander
J. Gillespie, Jr., James R. Greene, Harry
Holiday, Jr., Louis W. Menk, Michael T.
Nelligan, Richard de J. Osborne, Roy Tolk,
William L. Wearly, and John Does 1 through
8; Additional Defendants on Counterclaim.
Civ. A. No. 85-1133. United States District Court, D. New
Jersey. May 6, 1985.
Page 469
Pitney, Hardin, Kipp & Szuch by
Robert P. Hazlehurst, Jr., Morristown, N.J.,
and Breed, Abbott & Morgan by David S.
Patterson, New York City, for plaintiff.
Gelman & McNish by Jill L.
McNish, Hackensack, N.J., and Paul, Weiss,
Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison by Lewis A.
Kaplan, Michael Lampert, Mawrtin Flumenbaum,
New York City, for M.R.H. Holmes A Court and
Weeks Petroleum.
Sullivan & Cromwell by Richard E.
Carlton, New York City, for M.I.M. Holdings
Ltd.
Crummy, Del Deo, Dolan,
Griffinger & Vecchione by Brian J. McMahon,
Newark, N.J., and Davis, Polk & Wardwell by
William L. Rosoff, Dennis E. Glazer, New
York City, for individual additional
counterclaim defendants.
OPINION
DEBEVOISE, District Judge.
Defendant and counterclaimant
Weeks Petroleum Limited, seeks to enjoin
preliminarily plaintiff, Asarco,
Incorporated, a New Jersey corporation, and
its directors from issuing Asarco Series C
Preferred Stock declared as a dividend to
common stockholders on April 7, 1985.
The pleadings and the procedural
history of this case are described in my
bench opinion of April 22, 1985. On April 29
a hearing was held on Weeks' application for
an order preliminarily enjoining issuance of
the Preferred Stock. After the hearing I
reserved decision until May 1 at 3:30, and
temporarily restrained the issuance of the
Preferred Stock until then.
This opinion constitutes my
findings of fact and conclusions of law.
I. The Facts
During September 1984 entities
controlled by defendant MRH Holmes A Court,
including Weeks, began purchasing common
stock of Asarco in the open market. Most of
this stock was acquired by Weeks, and for
simplicity I shall refer to
Page 470
Weeks as the purchaser of the Asarco
stock. Weeks purchased amounts of up to
10,000 shares on most business days from
late September through late January 1985. By
February 19, 1985, Weeks had acquired 5
percent of Asarco common stock and was
required to file a Schedule 13D within 10
days. This it did on February 28. Between
February 19 and February 28 Weeks acquired
an additional 5 percent of Asarco common
stock, bringing its holdings up to almost 10
percent.
Item 4 of Weeks' Schedule 13D
stated that the "purpose of the acquisition
... is for investment as part of the general
investment portfolio" of Weeks and that
Weeks "does not presently intend to seek to
acquire control" of Asarco. Eight days after
the initial Schedule 13D filing, another
member of the Holmes A Court group, Bell
Resources Limited, filed a Notification and
Report Form under the Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvement Act of 1976 seeking
approval for the purchase of up to 49.9
percent of Asarco's common stock stating
that it was seeking to purchase at least 25
percent of Asarco's outstanding shares. A
week later, on March 14, Weeks amended its
Schedule 13D to state that it "intends to
acquire additional [Asarco] shares" and that
"[s]uch purchases could be made with a view
toward acquiring control of [Asarco]." On
April 7, 1985, the waiting period under the
Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvement Act
of 1976 expired, permitting further
purchases of Asarco's common stock by Weeks
and other Holmes A Court entities.
Asarco has a 12 member board of
directors. Three are members of Asarco
management and nine are outside directors,
each of whom is actively serving as an
officer and/or director of one or more major
business corporations. It was the Board's
perception that, as characterized in
Asarco's brief, "Holmes A Court is no
stranger to takeover tactics, unfair to
target company shareholders, having engaged
in a number of `creeping' acquisitions,
`greenmail' or low value bust up techniques
on target companies to achieve a profit for
himself at the expense of the target company
and its remaining shareholders. By his own
admission, Holmes A Court has been involved
in an estimated 25 to 30 takeover attempts
in recent years." Asarco brief at 7. The
Board concluded that Holmes A Court was not
a passive investor, that if his prior
transactions are any guide, his plans for
Asarco would probably not include an offer
to all of Asarco shareholders, and that
instead he would use his stock position to
gain access to the Asarco assets for less
than their fair value. The Board therefore
further concluded that Holmes A Court
represented a threat to the interest of
Asarco stockholders and that steps should be
taken to repel the threat.
On April 3rd, 1985, Asarco
released a proxy statement asking its
stockholders to adopt various proposed
anti-takeover measures which would create a
staggered Board, increase the authorized
number of shares of common stock, prohibit
stockholder action by written consent and
require special approval for certain
transactions or for a special meeting of
stockholders.
At its March 14th meeting, the
Board considered a possible Preferred Stock
dividend as a means of preventing a Holmes A
Court takeover. On Easter Sunday evening,
April 7, the Board convened and further
considered the issuance of a Preferred Stock
having designated preferences and voting
rights. The following day the Holmes A Court
interests would again be free to acquire
Asarco stock, the Hart-Scott-Rodino
Antitrust Improvements Act waiting period
having just expired. Faced with that
situation, the Board unanimously approved
the issuance of the Series C Preferred
Stock. The purpose for issuing this stock,
as Asarco's Chairman candidly testified, was
to prevent Holmes A Court or anyone like him
from acquiring a controlling position in
Asarco.
A description of the key terms of
the new Preferred Stock demonstrates how its
issuance would serve to prevent an outside
stockholder or group of stockholders from
acquiring control of Asarco. When evaluating
Page 471
the effect of the Preferred Stock
provisions, it must be recalled that Asarco
owns approximately 44 percent of the
ordinary shares of the Australian mining
corporation, MIM Holdings Limited, and that
MIM owns approximately 18 percent of
Asarco's common stock. In my April 22
opinion, I held that the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act does not forbid MIM to vote
those shares.
The dividend to be issued to all
common shareholders on April 30, 1985 was
one-tenth of a share of Series C Preferred
Stock for each share of common stock. Since
there are approximately 31.1 million shares
of Asarco common stock, Asarco proposed to
issue 3.1 million shares of Series C
Preferred. The terms of the Series C
Preferred are set forth in Asarco's
Certificate of Amendment of Restated
Certificate of Incorporation filed by the
Board. No further corporate authorization
was deemed necessary.
According to the amendments
adopted by the Board, each one-tenth of a
share of Series C Preferred Stock would be
entitled to a quarterly dividend of ten
cents if any dividend is declared. This
dividend has priority over common stock
dividends. After both the Series C and the
common stock dividends have been paid, each
one-tenth of a share of Series C Preferred
would participate equally with each full
share of common stock in all additional
dividends.
The Series C stock is entitled to
a liquidation preference of $15 per
one-tenth share or $150 per share. (This is
nearly six times the current market value of
Asarco's common stock). It also carries with
it the right to purchase one-seventh of a
share of Asarco's common stock, exercisable
between April 1 and June 30, 1987 at a cash
price of 50 percent of the average market
price for Asarco common stock during March
of 1987. After three years, Asarco has the
option to convert any outstanding shares of
Series C into common shares based on their
market value. The most extraordinary aspect
of the Series C Preferred Stock is its
voting rights. Initially, Series C shares
possess no voting rights except on matters
affecting the preferential rights of the
series. However, if any person or group
becomes the "beneficial owner" of more than
20 percent of either Asarco's common stock
or its Series C Preferred, then each
one-tenth of Series C owned by anyone other
than the 20 percent holder would have five
votes in all matters submitted to the common
stockholders. The Series C shares owned by
the 20 percent holder would continue to have
no voting rights. This 20 percent figure, of
course, is high enough so that MIM's
holdings of Asarco common stock would not or
itself trigger the voting provisions of the
Series C Preferred Stock. I have not checked
through the Series C definitions or the
facts relating to MIM ownership to determine
whether MIM might be deemed to be an
associate or an affiliate of any holder of
Asarco stock.
A few examples will illustrate
the effects of the voting provisions.
Because any stockholder who
acquires 20 percent of the common or
Preferred Stock will not be allowed to vote
his Preferred Stock, and because the less
than 20 percent owners will be able to vote
their common stock and will receive 50 votes
per share of Preferred Stock held by them, a
stockholder who held 20 percent of the
common and 20 percent of the Preferred
Series C would have only 4.1 percent of the
total vote, although he held one-fifth of
the stock.
If Weeks acquires 49 percent of
the common stock and by virtue of its
present holdings of 10 percent of the common
stock receives 10 percent of the Series C
Preferred Stock as a dividend, then it would
have 8.9 percent of the total vote.
A stockholder who held 80 percent
of both the common and Series C Preferred
which would constitute substantially all of
the shares other than those held by Asarco
management and MIMwould have only 38.3
percent of the total vote.
The Series C Preferred stock
voting provisions effectively block an
acquisition not approved by management. As I
read the provisions of the original
amendment of the Certificate of
Incorporation, it would subject
Page 472
participants in proxy fights to the risk
of the loss of relative voting power if the
participants obtained proxies for 20 percent
of the shares of common stock.
I am informed by Asarco that
between the hearing date and the date of
this opinion Asarco's Board of Directors
authorized a further amendment of the
Restated Certificate of Incorporation which
explicitly provides that the power to vote
shares by reason of the grant of proxies
will not trigger the Series C Preferred
voting provisions. Weeks contends that
through sloppy draftsmanship the amendment
fails to achieve this effect. It can at
least be said that the Board does not wish
to have the 20 percent ownership provision
trigger a restructuring of voting power in
the proxy situation and presumably at some
point it could find language to effect this
intent if it has not already done so.
All voting rights of the
Preferred Stock can be extinguished by an
offer to purchase for cash any and all
outstanding shares of Asarco, provided that
such offer conforms to certain so-called
fair price criteria. A "fair price" with
respect to the common stock is defined as
the higher or: (i) the highest price paid by
the offeror in the past two years, or (ii) a
price determined to be fair by a nationally
recognized investment banking firm selected
by the Asarco Board of directors. A "fair
price" with respect to the Preferred Stock
would be defined as the higher of: (i) the
highest price paid by the offeror in the
past two years, or (ii) the liquidation
preference of the Preferred Stock plus
accrued dividends. These provisions would
deter tender offers for less than 100
percent of Asarco's shares and would deter
the so-called two tier offer that includes
consideration other than cash. In addition,
even a cash offeror would be confronted with
the necessity of paying $465 million for the
Series C Preferred.
Weeks attacks the validity of the
issuance of the Series C Preferred Stock on
a number of grounds, namely: (i) It
conflicts with Article 7 of Asarco's
Certificate of Incorporation which cannot be
altered without the affirmative vote of
four-fifths of Asarco's shareholders; (ii)
It is contrary to the Business Corporation
Act and the Certificate of Incorporation
because a blank check preferred authorized
by statute contemplates only the issuance of
stock to facilitate corporate financing and
because Asarco's stockholders, when adopting
the blank check provisions, did not
authorize stock issued as a takeover
defense; (iii) Asarco's Board may not issue
preferred that alters underlying shareholder
voting rights; (iv) issuance of the Series C
Preferred Stock is not a valid dividend
because it discriminates among shareholders
of the same class; (v) because the Series C
Preferred Stock plan would deter tender
offers in proxy contests, any statute
authorizing such stock for that purpose
would violate the Supremacy and Commerce
Clauses of the United States Constitution;
(vi) the Board's action would unlawfully
manipulate Asarco's corporate machinery and
(vii) the issuance of the Series C Preferred
Stock violates Asarco's fiduciary duty to
all of its stockholders.
II. Conclusions of Law
For the reasons set forth in my
April 22, 1985 bench opinion I conclude the
Court has jurisdiction.
Weeks seeks preliminary
injunctive relief. In order to obtain such
relief the moving party must demonstrate a
reasonable likelihood of eventual success on
the merits as well as a probability of
irreparable injury if relief is not granted.
The trial court must also consider the
likely consequences on the parties and the
overall public interest. Freixenet,
S.A. v. Admiral Wine & Liquor Co.,
731 F.2d 148 (3d Cir. 1984).
A. Success on the Merits:
The first factor which must be
considered is Weeks' likelihood of success
on the merits.
1. The Business Judgment Rule:
Asarco and its directors defend the issuance
of the Series C Preferred Stock on the
ground that they have exercised their sound
judgment
Page 473
selecting a course of action which they
concluded is in the best interests of all
the stockholders of Asarco.
Under the business judgment rule,
which derives from the fundamental principle
that the business and affairs of the
corporation are managed by its board of
directors, the courts have held that absent
evidence of self-dealing, conflict of
interest, bad faith or fraud, directors of
the corporation will be presumed to have
exercised their business judgment in the
best interests of the corporation, and the
courts will respect their determination. For
example,
Papalexiou v. Tower West Condominium,
167 N.J.Super. 516 (Ch.Div.1979).
Weeks urges that Asarco and its
directors cannot claim the benefit of the
business judgment rule because all of the
directors have an interest of their own at
stake. The interest of the three directors
from management is obvioustheir interest in
the retention of their positions and all the
emoluments which the positions entail. Weeks
urges that even the outside directors have
an interest which precludes their reliance
on the presumption of the validity of their
determinations. They are the holders of
significant amounts of common stock, which,
since they do not contemplate acquiring a 20
percent interest, will benefit from the
voting provisions of the Series C Preferred.
Further, the purpose of the issuance of the
Series C Preferred is to prevent a takeover.
This, according to Weeks, brings this case
within the rule of the Third Circuit
announced
Johnson v. Trueblood, 629 F.2d 287,
289, 292 to 93 (3d Cir.1980), cert.
denied, 450 U.S. 999, 101 S.Ct. 1704, 68
L.Ed.2d 200 (1981). There Judge Seitz,
applying Delaware law, stated:
"The business judgment rule ...
achieves ... its purpose by postulating that
if actions are arguably taken for the
benefit of the corporation, then the
directors are presumed to have been
exercising their sound business judgment
rather than responding to any personal
motivations....
* * * * * *
...[U]nless the plaintiff can
tender evidence from which a fact finder
might conclude that the defendants' sole or
primary motive was to retain control, the
presumption of the rule remains.
* * * * * *
In short, we believe that under
Delaware law, at a minimum plaintiff must
make a showing that the sole or primary
motive of the defendant was to retain
control." 629 F.2d at 292 to 293.
The fact that the independent
Asarco directors own shares of stock which
may be affected by the Series C Preferred
and that their likelihood of reelection is
enhanced, is not sufficient to deprive their
decision of the benefit of the business
judgment rule. As Chief Judge Seitz noted in
Johnson v. Trueblood, supra, unlike
an ordinary fiduciary who may not have the
slightest conflict of interest, "by the very
nature of corporate life a director has a
certain amount of self-interest in
everything he does." 629 F.2d at 292.
Moran
v. Household International, Inc.,
490 A.2d 1059 (Del.Ch.1985), appeal pending,
seems to me to take a sound position
concerning the application of the business
judgment rule in the context of
anti-takeover measures. It distinguished
between the situation where a company is "in
play" and must respond to a specific
takeover bid and the situation where a
company perceives a general vulnerability
and plans against a takeover with a degree
of care. The present case comes somewhere
between these two extremes. The potential
bidder has been identified but no specific
offer has been made. Some planning and
deliberation was feasible, but in March and
April of 1985 the directors undoubtedly felt
the hot breath of Holmes A Court on their
backs.
As noted in Moran, the
business judgment rule is primarily a tool
of judicial review. The strength of the
presumption may vary from situation to
situation and it may vary depending on the
procedural context in which it is raised.
Moran applied
Page 474
the business judgment rule in the
takeover context as follows:
"Despite the nuances which have
developed in the decisions applying the
business judgment rule in takeover
situations, I conclude that the presumption
continues to afford protection to directors
in preplanned strategies as well as reactive
devices adopted on an ad hoc basis
and a showing of a `motive to retain
control' is not the equivalent of bad faith
sufficient to remove the presumption.
Johnson v. Trueblood, supra at 293.
Where, however, the takeover defensive
device is itself calculated to alter the
structure of the corporation, apart from the
question of motive, and results in a
fundamental transfer of the power from one
constituency (shareholders) to another (the
directors) the business judgment rule will
not foreclose inquiry into the directors'
action.
"Because the Rights Plan permits
the Household Board to act as the prime
negotiator for partial tender offers through
the power of redemption, the resulting
allocation of authority affects the
structural relationship between the Board
and the shareholders. It is this fundamental
result, rather than a mere conflict of
interest, which requires the Board to
present evidence, the business judgment rule
notwithstanding, that its approval of the
Plan was not motivated primarily by a desire
to retain control but by a reasonable belief
that the Plan was necessary to protect the
corporation from a perceived threat to
corporate policy and effectiveness. Cheff
v. Mathes, supra, [41 Del.Ch. 494,
199 A.2d 548] at 555 [1964]. Household is not
required, however, to demonstrate the
intrinsic fairness of the Plan. The Cheff
standard requires the defendant directors to
show that their adoption of the Plan was
`reasonable at the time' (199 A.2d at 555).
The burden thus placed may be viewed as the
burden of going forward on a showing of
reasonableness rather than a burden of
persuasion. Because of the protection
afforded directors by the business judgment
rule the latter burden does not shift and
remains with the plaintiffs". At 1076.
In the present case the defensive
device, the Series C Preferred Stock, is
calculated to alter the structure of the
corporation, removing decisions in takeover
matters from individual stockholders and
reposing them in the Board. Thus under
Moran the directors have the burden of
articulating the reasonableness of their
plan, but the burden of persuasion remains
with Weeks.
Weeks has advanced strong
arguments why stockholders would be better
off if it were possible for prospective
purchasers of Asarco stock to make a variety
of tender offersincluding two-tiered
offers. In support of these arguments Weeks
has presented the affidavit of Michael C.
Jensen, one of the key witnesses in the
Moran case. The directors espoused a
contrary view, citing past history of Holmes
A Court acquisitions and noting their
reliance on reputable investment counselors.
At this point in the litigation I cannot say
that Weeks has overcome the limited
protection afforded Asarco and its directors
by the business judgment rule insofar as it
concerns the decision to take steps which
would ensure that a takeover could be
carried out only in very limited
circumstances.
However, it does not necessarily
follow that the particular means which
Asarco seeks to pursue to achieve its goals,
that is to say, the issuance of a Series C
Preferred Stock, is lawful under the
provisions of the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act.
2. Validity Under the
Corporation Act:
The starting point for any
inquiry concerning the validity of the
corporate action is the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act, N.J.S.A. 14A:1-1 et seq.
The Act, which became effective on January
1, 1969, is to be "Liberally construed and
applied to promote its underlying purposes
and policies." Its underlying purposes and
policies are stated, among others, "(a) to
simplify, clarify and modernize the law
governing corporations." And "(b) to provide
a general corporate form for the conduct of
lawful business with such variations and
modifications from the form so provided as
the
Page 475
interested parties in any corporation may
agree upon, subject only to overriding
interests of this state and of third
parties." N.J.S.A. 14A:1-1(3).
There was a time when the New
Jersey courts limited severely the extent to
which legislation could permit directors and
stockholders to alter or readjust the rights
and powers of stockholders inter sese or to
expand the powers of the Board of Directors.
This limitation on legislative power, and
thus on corporate power, was forcefully
espoused in the ancient and now unlamented
case of
Zabriskie v. Hackensack and New York
Railroad Co., 18 N.J.Eq. 178 (Ch.1867).
Unanimous stockholder consent was required
to effect substantial changes in the
corporate structure and relationships, and
the Legislature was held powerless to decree
otherwise, for to do so would impinge upon
the basic contractual rights of
stockholders.
This doctrine eroded over the
years, and Zabriskie was finally laid
to rest
Brundage v. New Jersey Zinc Co., 48
N.J. 450, 226 A.2d 585 (1967);
A.P. Smith Manufacturing Co. v. Barlow,
13 N.J. 145, 98 A.2d 581, appeal
dismissed, 346 U.S. 861, 74 S.Ct. 107, 98
L.Ed. 373 (1953). After Brundage it
was clear that under New Jersey law the
power which the state had reserved over
corporations was a part of a tripartite
arrangement between the State, the
corporation and its stockholders, permitting
the Legislature to expand and modify the
powers of corporations as the needs of
society or sound corporate governance
dictated. The Legislature has wide powers to
change and expand the power of corporations.
A corporation may exercise fully the powers
conferred by the Business Corporation Act,
and is in no way inhibited by the rejected
principles set forth in Zabriskie.
With respect to voting rights of
shareholders, N.J.S.A. 14A:5-10 provides
that "[e]ach outstanding share shall be
entitled to one vote on each matter
submitted to a vote at a meeting of
shareholders, unless otherwise permitted in
the certificate of incorporation." Thus
differing voting rights are contemplated.
The power to issue shares is
provided for in N.J.S.A. 14A:7-1(1):
"... Such shares may consist of
one class or may be divided into two or more
classes and one class may be divided into
one or more series. Each class and series
may have such designation and such relative
voting, dividend, liquidation and other
rights, preferences, and limitations as
shall be stated in the certificate of
incorporation ..."
N.J.S.A. 14A:7-1(2) provides:
"In particular, and without
limitation upon the general power granted by
subsection 14A:7-1(1), a corporation, when
so authorized in its certificate of
incorporation, may issue classes of shares
and series of shares of any class ...
* * * * * *
"(f) lacking voting rights or
having limited voting rights or enjoying
special or multiple voting rights."
In the present case Asarco's
Board of Directors acted pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 to issue the Series C
Preferred Stock. If authorized by the
corporation's certification of
incorporation, a corporation's board of
directors may, under that statutory
provision, amend the certification of
incorporation to issue new stock and to
specify its relative rights, preferences and
limitations. Commenting on 14A:7-2 the
Commissioners stated:
"Section 14A:7-2(2), which
provides that the certificate of
incorporation may authorize the board to act
with respect to series, is intended to
permit a `blanket' authorization in general
terms. Board action under this subsection
does not require the approval of the
shareholders or of any series of class of
shareholders. See subsection 14A:9-3(3).
The fourth sentence of subsection
14A:7-2(2) makes plain that the board has
the power to act under the subsection
without regard to the prejudicial effect
upon outstanding shares, unless the
certification
Page 476
of incorporation places an express
limitation upon the grant of authority."
Even prior to the effective date
of the Business Corporation Act, New Jersey
permitted certificates of incorporation to
empower boards of directors to issue blank
check preferred stock. R.S. 14:8-2, N.J.
Laws 1926, c. 318, Section 6, page 534.
Acting under the new Act Asarco so empowered
its Board in 1970, when Asarco's
shareholders amended the certificate of
incorporation to create a class of 10
million shares of blank check preferred and
to authorize the board of directors to set
the terms of that preferred from time to
time.
In the proxy statement soliciting
approval of blank check preferred,
management set forth the following reasons
why Asarco's Board needed its new grant of
power:
"Your Board of Directors
considers that the growing complexity of
modern business financing requires greater
flexibility in the Company's capital
structure than now exists. Under the
proposed amendment, the power to issue
preferred stock in series would enable the
Company to operate more effectively in
acquisition negotiations that may develop in
the future, since authorization of such
stock would permit the issuance at various
times of shares specifically adapted to a
wide variety of situations. Granting to the
Board the authority to set the terms of any
series would eliminate the time and expense
required for stockholder action on each
proposed issuance of preferred stock except
where such action is required by law or the
rules of any national securities exchange.
The Company has no present plans which
contemplate the issuance or sale of any
preferred stock."
The shareholders were thus
informed that the reason for the blank check
power was to finance Asarco's corporate
acquisitions. They were not informed that
the power was to be used to discourage
takeover bids. It is reasonable to conclude
that at that time management itself did not
contemplate using the power to issue
preferred stock for that purpose. Another
proposed amendment discussed in the proxy
statement called for a super majority of an
80 percent vote by all holders of all
classes of Asarco voting stock prior to
Asarco effecting a merger, or consolidation
with, or sale of assets to any holder of
more than 10 percent of any class of stock.
With respect to that amendment the proxy
statement advised that its purpose and
effect was to make more difficult and
thereby discourage a takeover attempt which
might not be in the best interest of the
corporation.
Weeks urges that the Series C
Preferred violates New Jersey statutes in
two respects. First, the statute permits the
issuance of blank check stock only for
corporate financing purposes and not to
avoid a takeover. Second, the statute does
not authorize alteration of voting rights
discriminatorily within a class.
The kind of statutes of which
N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 is typical were designed to
meet a need for flexibility in securing
corporate financing. With rapidly shifting
conditions in the securities markets, it was
often difficult to float stock the terms of
which had to be established by the time
consuming procedures of stockholder
approval. Thus there was a need to give
directors power over the terms of new issues
of Preferred Stock on short notice. See 11
W. Fletcher, Encyclopedia of Corporations,
Section 5284.1 (1971 rev.).
It is reasonable to conclude that
the New Jersey Legislature had this purpose
in mind when it enacted Section 7-2 and its
predecessors. Since the kind of takeover
efforts which are now in vogue were a rarity
when the blank check statutes were adopted,
it is also reasonable to conclude that the
Legislature did not consider one way or the
other whether the statutory power could be
used to resist takeovers. I do not believe
that that is a reason to hold that the power
cannot be used for that purpose. The grant
of authority is broad. One purpose of the
Business Corporation Act was, as previously
noted, to permit variations and
modifications of corporate forms, and it is
to be liberally construed
Page 477
and applied to achieve its purposes. If
blank check preferred stock serves a useful
corporate purpose, and if its issuance is
within the language of the statute, I see no
reason to hold it to be unauthorized merely
because the particular purpose was not in
the contemplation of the Legislature when it
adopted the enabling provisions of the
statute.
By analogous reasoning, I do not
find that in 1970 when Asarco's Certificate
of Incorporation was amended, Asarco's
stockholders were led to believe the Board's
power to issue stock was to be limited to
financing acquisitions or raising capital
for other purposes. No one then was thinking
of the relationship of preferred stock to
takeover situations, but it is reasonable to
conclude that all parties to the amendment
intended that the amended certificate confer
upon the directors a full panoply of powers
authorized by N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2.
Weeks' other statutory argument,
however, is more compelling. By amending its
Certificate of Incorporation to provide the
Series C Preferred, Asarco's Board created a
situation where the same class of stock will
have different voting rights. This can be
viewed as occurring with respect to two
classes of stock. The new preferred will
have differing voting rights depending on
whether it is held by a 20 percent holder.
The new preferred is piggybacked onto the
outstanding common stock, and therefore
there has also been created a situation in
which certain common stockholdersthose who
acquire 20 percent of the shareswill have
their voting power diluted five-fold
vis-a-vis the other common stockholders.
This is to be distinguished from a situation
where a new class of stock has superior
voting rights to all common stockholders or
to all stockholders holding some other
class. I conclude that while the Business
Corporation Act permits changes of voting
rights as between classes or series of
stock, it does not permit an amendment under
Section 7-2 which would redistribute voting
power within a class or series.
Equality of voting power among
stockholders of the same class, or at least
among the same series of a class that has
more than one series, is a basic concept in
corporate law.
Faunce v. Boost Co., 15 N.J.Super.
534, 83 A.2d 649 (Ch.Div.1951) Judge
(later Justice) Haneman, noted that "The
right to vote is a basic contractual right.
It was an incident to membership or of
property in the stock, of which the
stockholder or member cannot be deprived
without his consent." At 539.
The language of the New Jersey
statutes clearly suggests that voting rights
may be different among different classes or
series, but nowhere is it suggested that
voting rights may be different within a
class or series.
With respect to the original
authorization of stock, N.J.S.A. 14A:7-1(1)
provides that "Each class in a series may
have ... such relative voting ... as shall
be stated in the certificate of
incorporation...." and Section 7-1(2)
provides that "a corporation ... may issue
classes of shares and series of shares of
any class .. (r) lacking voting rights or
having limited voting rights or enjoying
special or multiple voting rights."
Similarly the provisions of
N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 refer in subsection (1) to
the "determination of the relative rights,
preferences and limitations of the shares of
any class or series." Subsection (2)
providing for issuance of stock pursuant to
board action refers to "the board's
determination of the relative rights and
preferences of any class or series." A fair
reading of that subsection compels the
conclusion that it confers power on the
board to alter rights and preferences
between different classes of stock. There is
no express authority for a board to do what
Asarco's Board has sought to do
herenamelychange the voting powers of
shareholders within a particular class
vis-a-vis other members of the same class.
The Series C Preferred Stock would have
different voting rights within the series,
depending upon whether or not a Series C
share were held by a 20 percent holder. In
light of the piggyback aspect of the
issuance of the Preferred Stock the
Page 478
common stock would have different voting
rights depending on presence or absence of
20 percent ownership.
Baker
v. Providence and Worcester Co.,
378 A.2d 121 (Del.1977), reversing
364 A.2d 838 (Del.Ch.1976), the Delaware Supreme
Court upheld an original corporate charter
which limited the voting rights of large
shareholders. The Chancery Court had ruled
that Section 151(a) of Delaware's
corporation law prohibited the creation even
in the original certificate of incorporation
of a class of stock which has differing
voting rights stating:
"[W]ithout question, a reading of
Section 151(a) leaves one with the firm
conviction that `classes' may be vested with
differing voting rights but that particular
shareholders within one class of stock may
not. The statute speaks only in terms of
`classes' and unequivocally and repeatedly
refers to differentiating only on the
grounds of class.
* * * * * *
Thus I am compelled to conclude,
after a consideration of both the evolution
of Section 151(a) and the language of its
provisions, that the divergent voting rights
in issue here are not permissible since they
are not on a class basis."
I am not persuaded by the logic
of the opinion of the Delaware Supreme Court
reversing the Chancery Court and do not
believe it would be followed in New Jersey.
However, the situation which
prevailed in the present case is even more
difficult to rationalize. Here the different
voting rights among different categories of
common stockholders were not contained in
the original Certificate of Incorporation.
The Board imposed the provision long after
the stock was issued and in the hands of
shareholders. The case of Faunce v. Boost
Co., supra was decided when the
Zabriskie vested rights doctrine still
had considerable force. It was written by a
judge who later became a member of New
Jersey's Supreme Court and who joined in the
Brundage opinion which concluded that
Zabriskie has no proper place in
modern corporation law.
Nevertheless, I think Faunce
is useful in the present case. It cannot be
cited to support the proposition that the
Legislature lacks the power to permit the
creation of stock having different voting
rights within the same class. It does
provide guidance in determining whether in
enacting N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 the Legislature
intended to empower a board of directors to
amend a certificate of incorporation so as
to give some holders of common stock more
voting rights than other holders of the same
kind of shares or whether to give some
holders of preferred stock more voting
rights than other holders of the same kind
of stock.
In Faunce the shareholders
by a two-thirds vote approved a plan under
which the common stock with voting power was
transformed into common stock with no voting
power. All voting power was given to a new
class of stock which was not entitled to
share in the profits of the corporation or
the assets on dissolution. The Court stated:
"There is nothing in the statute
as it existed at the time the stock was
issued that could be read into a contract
which would permit the contemplated action
... No specific section of R.S. 14:11-1,
N.J. S.A., permits a majority to
disenfranchise the minority. Implicit in the
original contract was the understanding that
each common shareholder would have the right
and privilege to a voice in the management
and conduct of the affairs of the
corporation." 15 N.J.Super. 539, 540, 83
A.2d 649.
It requires little imagination to
conjure up situations in which corporate
control could be manipulated by readjustment
of intra-class voting rights through the
mechanism of the issuance by the Board of
blank check Preferred Stock. Even granting
that in the present case the Board's
purposes were to implement sound business
objectives, the language of the statute, the
potential for abuse of this power and the
radical departure from traditional corporate
practice which it represents leads
Page 479
to the conclusion that New Jersey courts
would not read this power into the statute.
A New Jersey court would probably reach the
same result as Faunce, but it's
rationale would be somewhat different. The
conclusion I have reached is supported by
the case of Telvest, Inc. v. Olsen,
Civil Action No. 5798 (Del.Ch. filed March
8, 1979). There the Delaware Chancery Court
held the issuance of piggyback preferred to
be unlawful under the Delaware general
corporation law because it had the effect of
altering the relative voting rights of the
corporation's common stockholders. In
Telvest, the directors of Outdoor Sports
Industries, Inc. ("OSI"), in an effort to
defend against a takeover attempt by
Telvest, created, without shareholder
approval, a series of preferred stock with
an 80 percent class vote on business
combinations and other specified
transactions with any party owning 20
percent or more of the outstanding voting
stock of the company. The OSI certificate of
incorporation, like Asarco's, empowered the
board of directors to issue preferred stock
in series and to designate the stock's
characteristics, including its voting
powers. The new preferred stock, like
Asarco's, was to be issued as a pro rata
stock dividend to OSI's existing
stockholders.
The Court summarized the
transaction as follows:
"As I see it, through the
declaration of a purported stock dividend,
OSI's board has attempted to convert the
voting rights of those same stockholders who
would have had the power to approve or
disapprove certain business combinations by
majority votei.e., the holders of the
common stockinto the power, in certain
situations, to permit less than a majority
of the present common stockholders to vote
down a merger, sale of assets, etc. when it
is being proposed by the owner of 20 percent
or more of the outstanding common stock."
Telvest at 7.
This, of course, is what would
happen here if the Series C preferred
issued.
The Delaware court then went on
to state:
"I say that, in effect, this
brings about an alteration of the voting
powers of the common stock because the First
Series Preferred, being issued in piggyback
fashion as a common stock dividend at a one
for ten ratio to the common, reflects a
proportionate voting power almost identical
to that previously held by the owners of the
common stock. The difference is that the
voting power of a 20 percent or more
stockholder who is opposed by OSI's board
will not be as strong as it would have been
prior to the proportionate issuance of the
First Series Preferred as a stock dividend,
while the voting powers of the remaining
stockholders will become stronger, at least
insofar as merger, consolidation, etc., are
concerned.
* * * * * *
"Thus, I think it is clear that
the action taken by the board in creating
the First Series Preferred and declaring it
as a common stock dividend will, if
permitted to stand, alter the previously
existing voting rights granted to OSI's
common shareholders by OSI's certificate of
incorporation." Telvest at 8-9.
The Court dismissed OSI's
argument that the stock issuance was
authorized by Section 151 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law, which, like Section
14A:7-2 of the New Jersey Business
Corporation Act, permits a board of
directors, by resolution, to issue preferred
stock and to get voting rights and
preferences thereon by resolution if
authorized to do so by the company's
certificate of incorporation.
The reasoning in Telvest
is sound and is persuasive in this case. It
leads to the conclusion that in adopting the
voting provisions of Asarco Series C
Preferred Stock, Asarco's Board of Directors
exceeded the authority which the New Jersey
Business Corporation Act conferred upon
them. Thus issuance of the stock would be
unlawful.
To summarize my conclusions on
the legal issues:
Page 480
(i) The directors of Asarco do
not lose the benefit of the business
judgment rule simply because they have
decided to make more difficult the efforts
of outsiders to take control of the
corporation; however, they do have the
burden of articulating reasons why their
actions are in the best interest of all the
stockholders and not motivated primarily to
retain present management and control. For
the purposes of the preliminary injunction
application the directors have met this
limited burden and Weeks' proofs do not
overcome the presumption of the director's
exercise of their business judgment in the
best interests of the corporation.
(ii) N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 authorizes
the corporation's Board of Directors to
issue Preferred Stock for any lawful
purpose, including issuance as part of an
otherwise lawful plan to make more difficult
the acquisition of a controlling interest in
the corporation.
(iii) When Asarco's stockholders
approved the amendment of Asarco's
Certificate of Incorporation conferring upon
its directors the power to issue stock
pursuant to N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2, the power
conferred was plenary, authorizing the
directors to exercise to the full all powers
conferred by the statute.
(iv) Neither N.J.S.A. 14A:7-2 nor
any other provision of the Business
Corporation Act confer upon the corporation
or its directors the power to issue classes
of shares which have differing voting rights
within the same class or which modify
previously issued classes of shares so as to
confer different voting rights upon shares
within that class. Asarco's Series C
Preferred Stock has this effect and
consequently its issuance would be ultra
vires and void.
This leads to the conclusion that
Weeks is likely to succeed on the merits of
its claim that Asarco's Series C Preferred
Stock is unlawful under the New Jersey
Business Corporation Act. It is unnecessary
to consider Weeks' remaining grounds for a
finding of invalidity.
B. Irreparable injury: I
also conclude that Weeks has established
irreparable injury if Series C Preferred
Stock is issued. It holds a substantial
block of Asarco common stock and evidently
plans to acquire in excess of 20 percent of
the total common shares outstanding. If it
does so, its vote will be illegally diluted
by virtue of the new preferred. Weeks'
opportunity to make a tender offer will be
limited by an unlawful device and
correspondingly the opportunity of other
shareholders to receive a tender offer will
be impaired. All this constitutes
irreparable injury.
Applied Digital Data Systems, Inc. v.
Milgo Electronic Corp., 425 F.Supp. 1145
(S.D.N.Y.1977).
Once the new stock is issued, it
will be in the hands of the common
stockholders in the first instance, and then
undoubtedly large amounts of it will be
traded separately from the common. All
manner of equities may arise which will make
it difficult or impossible to restore the
parties to this proceeding to the status quo
ante. This too presents a threat of
irreparable injury. Telvest, Inc. v.
Olsen, supra.
C. Other Equitable
Considerations: Asarco's efforts to
prevent Holmes A Court's takeover will be
weakened by an order enjoining issuance of a
Series C Preferred Stock. I'm not in a
position to judge whether such a takeover
would benefit or injure Asarco's
shareholders in the aggregate. Assuming that
such a takeover would be harmful to their
interests, it must be imposed by measures
which are lawful under New Jersey's
corporation law. To allow unlawful measures
to be pursued would only ensure that injury
of a different kind would be inflicted upon
the shareholders and upon Asarco. There
would remain the problem of reversing or
nullifying an unlawful stock issue. The
corporation and perhaps its directors might
face liability arising out of the issuance
and subsequent transfer of the shares.
The public has an interest in
preventing unlawful stock from being
circulated in the securities markets and in
compliance with the New Jersey Business
Corporation Law.
Thus, all the pertinent factors
point to the granting of preliminary
injunctive
Page 481
relief. An appropriate order will be
entered. |