| Page 34 637 A.2d 34
62 USLW 2530, Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P
98,063 PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS INC.,
Viacom Inc., Martin S. Davis,
Grace J. Fippinger, Irving R. Fischer,
Benjamin L. Hooks,
Franz J. Lutolf, James A. Pattison, Irwin
Schloss, Samuel J.
Silberman, Lawrence M. Small, and George
Weissman,
Defendants Below, Appellants,
v.
QVC NETWORK INC., Plaintiff Below, Appellee.
In re PARAMOUNT COMMUNICATIONS INC.
SHAREHOLDERS' LITIGATION. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: Dec. 9, 1993.
Decided by Order: Dec. 9, 1993.
Opinion: Feb. 4, 1994.
Page 35
Upon appeal from the Court of
Chancery. AFFIRMED.
Charles F. Richards, Jr., Thomas
A. Beck and Anne C. Foster of Richards,
Layton & Finger, Wilmington, Barry R.
Ostrager (argued), Michael J. Chepiga,
Robert F. Cusumano, Mary Kay Vyskocil and
Peter C. Thomas of Simpson Thacher &
Bartlett, New York City, for appellants
Paramount Communications Inc. and the
individual defendants.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III and
William M. Lafferty of Morris, Nichols,
Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, Stuart J.
Baskin (argued), Jeremy
Page 36 G. Epstein, Alan S. Goudiss and Seth J.
Lapidow of Shearman & Sterling, New York
City, for appellant Viacom Inc.
Bruce M. Stargatt, David C.
McBride, Josy W. Ingersoll, William D.
Johnston, Bruce L. Silverstein and James P.
Hughes, Jr. of Young, Conaway, Stargatt &
Taylor, Wilmington, Herbert M. Wachtell
(argued), Michael W. Schwartz, Theodore N.
Mirvis, Paul K. Rowe and George T. Conway,
III of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, New
York City, for appellee QVC Network Inc.
Irving Morris, Karen L. Morris
and Abraham Rappaport of Morris & Morris,
Pamela S. Tikellis, Carolyn D. Mack and
Cynthia A. Calder of Chimicles, Burt &
Jacobsen, Joseph A. Rosenthal and Norman M.
Monhait of Rosenthal, Monhait, Gross &
Goddess, P.A., Wilmington, Daniel W. Krasner
and Jeffrey G. Smith of Wolf, Haldenstein,
Adler, Freeman & Herz, Arthur N. Abbey
(argued), and Mark C. Gardy of Abbey &
Ellis, New York City, for the shareholder
appellees.
Before VEASEY, C.J., MOORE and
HOLLAND, JJ.
VEASEY, Chief Justice.
In this appeal we review an order
of the Court of Chancery dated November 24,
1993 (the "November 24 Order"),
preliminarily enjoining certain defensive
measures designed to facilitate a so-called
strategic alliance between Viacom Inc.
("Viacom") and Paramount Communications Inc.
("Paramount") approved by the board of
directors of Paramount (the "Paramount
Board" or the "Paramount directors") and to
thwart an unsolicited, more valuable, tender
offer by QVC Network Inc. ("QVC"). In
affirming, we hold that the sale of control
in this case, which is at the heart of the
proposed strategic alliance, implicates
enhanced judicial scrutiny of the conduct of
the Paramount Board under Unocal Corp. v.
Mesa Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946
(1985), and Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews &
Forbes Holdings, Inc., Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173 (1986). We further hold that the conduct
of the Paramount Board was not reasonable as
to process or result.
QVC and certain stockholders of
Paramount commenced separate actions (later
consolidated) in the Court of Chancery
seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive
relief against Paramount, certain members of
the Paramount Board, and Viacom. This action
arises out of a proposed acquisition of
Paramount by Viacom through a tender offer
followed by a second-step merger (the
"Paramount-Viacom transaction"), and a
competing unsolicited tender offer by QVC.
The Court of Chancery granted a preliminary
injunction. QVC Network, Inc. v. Paramount
Communications Inc., Del.Ch., 635 A.2d 1245,
Jacobs, V.C. (1993), (the "Court of Chancery
Opinion"). We affirmed by order dated
December 9, 1993. Paramount Communications
Inc. v. QVC Network Inc., Del.Supr., Nos.
427 and 428, 1993, 637 A.2d 828, Veasey,
C.J. (Dec. 9, 1993) (the "December 9
Order").
1
The Court of Chancery found that
the Paramount directors violated their
fiduciary duties by favoring the
Paramount-Viacom transaction over the more
valuable unsolicited offer of QVC. The Court
of Chancery preliminarily enjoined Paramount
and the individual defendants (the
"Paramount defendants") from amending or
modifying Paramount's stockholder rights
agreement (the "Rights Agreement"),
including the redemption of the Rights, or
taking other action to facilitate the
consummation of the pending tender offer by
Viacom or any proposed second-step merger,
including the Merger Agreement between
Paramount and Viacom dated September 12,
1993 (the "Original Merger Agreement"), as
amended on October 24, 1993 (the "Amended
Merger Agreement"). Viacom and the Paramount
defendants were enjoined from taking any
action
Page 37 to exercise any provision of the Stock
Option Agreement between Paramount and
Viacom dated September 12, 1993 (the "Stock
Option Agreement"), as amended on October
24, 1993. The Court of Chancery did not
grant preliminary injunctive relief as to
the termination fee provided for the benefit
of Viacom in Section 8.05 of the Original
Merger Agreement and the Amended Merger
Agreement (the "Termination Fee").
Under the circumstances of this
case, the pending sale of control implicated
in the Paramount-Viacom transaction required
the Paramount Board to act on an informed
basis to secure the best value reasonably
available to the stockholders. Since we
agree with the Court of Chancery that the
Paramount directors violated their fiduciary
duties, we have AFFIRMED the entry of the
order of the Vice Chancellor granting the
preliminary injunction and have REMANDED
these proceedings to the Court of Chancery
for proceedings consistent herewith.
We also have attached an Addendum
to this opinion addressing serious
deposition misconduct by counsel who
appeared on behalf of a Paramount director
at the time that director's deposition was
taken by a lawyer representing QVC.
2
I. FACTS
The Court of Chancery Opinion
contains a detailed recitation of its
factual findings in this matter. Court of
Chancery Opinion, 635 A.2d 1245, 1246-1259.
Only a brief summary of the facts is
necessary for purposes of this opinion. The
following summary is drawn from the findings
of fact set forth in the Court of Chancery
Opinion and our independent review of the
record.
3
Paramount is a Delaware
corporation with its principal offices in
New York City. Approximately 118 million
shares of Paramount's common stock are
outstanding and traded on the New York Stock
Exchange. The majority of Paramount's stock
is publicly held by numerous unaffiliated
investors. Paramount owns and operates a
diverse group of entertainment businesses,
including motion picture and television
studios, book publishers, professional
sports teams, and amusement parks.
There are 15 persons serving on
the Paramount Board. Four directors are
officer-employees of Paramount: Martin S.
Davis ("Davis"), Paramount's Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer since 1983; Donald
Oresman ("Oresman"), Executive
Vice-President, Chief Administrative
Officer, and General Counsel; Stanley R.
Jaffe, President and Chief Operating
Officer; and Ronald L. Nelson, Executive
Vice President and Chief Financial Officer.
Paramount's 11 outside directors are
distinguished and experienced business
persons who are present or former senior
executives of public corporations or
financial institutions.
4
Page 38
Viacom is a Delaware corporation
with its headquarters in Massachusetts.
Viacom is controlled by Sumner M. Redstone
("Redstone"), its Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer, who owns indirectly
approximately 85.2 percent of Viacom's
voting Class A stock and approximately 69.2
percent of Viacom's nonvoting Class B stock
through National Amusements, Inc. ("NAI"),
an entity 91.7 percent owned by Redstone.
Viacom has a wide range of entertainment
operations, including a number of well-known
cable television channels such as MTV,
Nickelodeon, Showtime, and The Movie
Channel. Viacom's equity co-investors in the
Paramount-Viacom transaction include NYNEX
Corporation and Blockbuster Entertainment
Corporation.
QVC is a Delaware corporation
with its headquarters in West Chester,
Pennsylvania. QVC has several large
stockholders, including Liberty Media
Corporation, Comcast Corporation, Advance
Publications, Inc., and Cox Enterprises Inc.
Barry Diller ("Diller"), the Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer of QVC, is also a
substantial stockholder. QVC sells a variety
of merchandise through a televised shopping
channel. QVC has several equity co-investors
in its proposed combination with Paramount
including BellSouth Corporation and Comcast
Corporation.
Beginning in the late 1980s,
Paramount investigated the possibility of
acquiring or merging with other companies in
the entertainment, media, or communications
industry. Paramount considered such
transactions to be desirable, and perhaps
necessary, in order to keep pace with
competitors in the rapidly evolving field of
entertainment and communications. Consistent
with its goal of strategic expansion,
Paramount made a tender offer for Time Inc.
in 1989, but was ultimately unsuccessful.
See Paramount Communications, Inc. v. Time
Inc., Del.Supr.,
571 A.2d 1140 (1990)
("Time-Warner ").
Although Paramount had considered
a possible combination of Paramount and
Viacom as early as 1990, recent efforts to
explore such a transaction began at a dinner
meeting between Redstone and Davis on April
20, 1993. Robert Greenhill ("Greenhill"),
Chairman of Smith Barney Shearson Inc.
("Smith Barney"), attended and helped
facilitate this meeting. After several more
meetings between Redstone and Davis, serious
negotiations began taking place in early
July.
It was tentatively agreed that
Davis would be the chief executive officer
and Redstone would be the controlling
stockholder of the combined company, but the
parties could not reach agreement on the
merger price and the terms of a stock option
to be granted to Viacom. With respect to
price, Viacom offered a package of cash and
stock (primarily Viacom Class B nonvoting
stock) with a market value of approximately
$61 per share, but Paramount wanted at least
$70 per share.
Shortly after negotiations broke
down in July 1993, two notable events
occurred. First, Davis apparently learned of
QVC's potential interest in Paramount, and
told Diller over lunch on July 21, 1993,
that Paramount was not for sale. Second, the
market value of Viacom's Class B nonvoting
stock increased from $46.875 on July 6 to
$57.25 on August 20. QVC claims (and Viacom
disputes) that this price increase was
caused by open market purchases of such
stock by Redstone or entities controlled by
him.
Page 39
On August 20, 1993, discussions
between Paramount and Viacom resumed when
Greenhill arranged another meeting between
Davis and Redstone. After a short hiatus,
the parties negotiated in earnest in early
September, and performed due diligence with
the assistance of their financial advisors,
Lazard Freres & Co. ("Lazard") for Paramount
and Smith Barney for Viacom. On September 9,
1993, the Paramount Board was informed about
the status of the negotiations and was
provided information by Lazard, including an
analysis of the proposed transaction.
On September 12, 1993, the
Paramount Board met again and unanimously
approved the Original Merger Agreement
whereby Paramount would merge with and into
Viacom. The terms of the merger provided
that each share of Paramount common stock
would be converted into 0.10 shares of
Viacom Class A voting stock, 0.90 shares of
Viacom Class B nonvoting stock, and $9.10 in
cash. In addition, the Paramount Board
agreed to amend its "poison pill" Rights
Agreement to exempt the proposed merger with
Viacom. The Original Merger Agreement also
contained several provisions designed to
make it more difficult for a potential
competing bid to succeed. We focus, as did
the Court of Chancery, on three of these
defensive provisions: a "no-shop" provision
(the "No-Shop Provision"), the Termination
Fee, and the Stock Option Agreement.
First, under the No-Shop
Provision, the Paramount Board agreed that
Paramount would not solicit, encourage,
discuss, negotiate, or endorse any competing
transaction unless: (a) a third party "makes
an unsolicited written, bona fide proposal,
which is not subject to any material
contingencies relating to financing"; and
(b) the Paramount Board determines that
discussions or negotiations with the third
party are necessary for the Paramount Board
to comply with its fiduciary duties.
Second, under the Termination Fee
provision, Viacom would receive a $100
million termination fee if: (a) Paramount
terminated the Original Merger Agreement
because of a competing transaction; (b)
Paramount's stockholders did not approve the
merger; or (c) the Paramount Board
recommended a competing transaction.
The third and most significant
deterrent device was the Stock Option
Agreement, which granted to Viacom an option
to purchase approximately 19.9 percent
(23,699,000 shares) of Paramount's
outstanding common stock at $69.14 per share
if any of the triggering events for the
Termination Fee occurred. In addition to the
customary terms that are normally associated
with a stock option, the Stock Option
Agreement contained two provisions that were
both unusual and highly beneficial to
Viacom: (a) Viacom was permitted to pay for
the shares with a senior subordinated note
of questionable marketability instead of
cash, thereby avoiding the need to raise the
$1.6 billion purchase price (the "Note
Feature"); and (b) Viacom could elect to
require Paramount to pay Viacom in cash a
sum equal to the difference between the
purchase price and the market price of
Paramount's stock (the "Put Feature").
Because the Stock Option Agreement was not
"capped" to limit its maximum dollar value,
it had the potential to reach (and in this
case did reach) unreasonable levels.
After the execution of the
Original Merger Agreement and the Stock
Option Agreement on September 12, 1993,
Paramount and Viacom announced their
proposed merger. In a number of public
statements, the parties indicated that the
pending transaction was a virtual certainty.
Redstone described it as a "marriage" that
would "never be torn asunder" and stated
that only a "nuclear attack" could break the
deal. Redstone also called Diller and John
Malone of Tele-Communications Inc., a major
stockholder of QVC, to dissuade them from
making a competing bid.
Despite these attempts to
discourage a competing bid, Diller sent a
letter to Davis on September 20, 1993,
proposing a merger in which QVC would
acquire Paramount for approximately $80 per
share, consisting of 0.893 shares of QVC
common stock and $30 in cash. QVC also
expressed its eagerness to meet with
Paramount to negotiate the details of a
transaction. When the Paramount Board met on
September 27, it was advised by Davis that
the Original Merger
Page 40 Agreement prohibited Paramount from having
discussions with QVC (or anyone else) unless
certain conditions were satisfied. In
particular, QVC had to supply evidence that
its proposal was not subject to financing
contingencies. The Paramount Board was also
provided information from Lazard describing
QVC and its proposal.
On October 5, 1993, QVC provided
Paramount with evidence of QVC's financing.
The Paramount Board then held another
meeting on October 11, and decided to
authorize management to meet with QVC. Davis
also informed the Paramount Board that
Booz-Allen & Hamilton ("Booz-Allen"), a
management consulting firm, had been
retained to assess, inter alia, the
incremental earnings potential from a
Paramount-Viacom merger and a Paramount-QVC
merger. Discussions proceeded slowly,
however, due to a delay in Paramount signing
a confidentiality agreement. In response to
Paramount's request for information, QVC
provided two binders of documents to
Paramount on October 20.
On October 21, 1993, QVC filed
this action and publicly announced an $80
cash tender offer for 51 percent of
Paramount's outstanding shares (the "QVC
tender offer"). Each remaining share of
Paramount common stock would be converted
into 1.42857 shares of QVC common stock in a
second-step merger. The tender offer was
conditioned on, among other things, the
invalidation of the Stock Option Agreement,
which was worth over $200 million by that
point.
5 QVC
contends that it had to commence a tender
offer because of the slow pace of the merger
discussions and the need to begin seeking
clearance under federal antitrust laws.
Confronted by QVC's hostile bid,
which on its face offered over $10 per share
more than the consideration provided by the
Original Merger Agreement, Viacom realized
that it would need to raise its bid in order
to remain competitive. Within hours after
QVC's tender offer was announced, Viacom
entered into discussions with Paramount
concerning a revised transaction. These
discussions led to serious negotiations
concerning a comprehensive amendment to the
original Paramount-Viacom transaction. In
effect, the opportunity for a "new deal"
with Viacom was at hand for the Paramount
Board. With the QVC hostile bid offering
greater value to the Paramount stockholders,
the Paramount Board had considerable
leverage with Viacom.
At a special meeting on October
24, 1993, the Paramount Board approved the
Amended Merger Agreement and an amendment to
the Stock Option Agreement. The Amended
Merger Agreement was, however, essentially
the same as the Original Merger Agreement,
except that it included a few new
provisions. One provision related to an $80
per share cash tender offer by Viacom for 51
percent of Paramount's stock, and another
changed the merger consideration so that
each share of Paramount would be converted
into 0.20408 shares of Viacom Class A voting
stock, 1.08317 shares of Viacom Class B
nonvoting stock, and 0.20408 shares of a new
series of Viacom convertible preferred
stock. The Amended Merger Agreement also
added a provision giving Paramount the right
not to amend its Rights Agreement to exempt
Viacom if the Paramount Board determined
that such an amendment would be inconsistent
with its fiduciary duties because another
offer constituted a "better alternative."
6 Finally, the
Paramount Board was given the power to
terminate the Amended Merger Agreement if it
withdrew its recommendation of the Viacom
transaction or recommended a competing
transaction.
Although the Amended Merger
Agreement offered more consideration to the
Paramount stockholders and somewhat more
flexibility to the Paramount Board than did
the Original Merger Agreement, the defensive
measures designed to make a competing bid
more difficult were not removed or modified.
Page 41 In particular, there is no evidence in the
record that Paramount sought to use its
newly-acquired leverage to eliminate or
modify the No-Shop Provision, the
Termination Fee, or the Stock Option
Agreement when the subject of amending the
Original Merger Agreement was on the table.
Viacom's tender offer commenced
on October 25, 1993, and QVC's tender offer
was formally launched on October 27, 1993.
Diller sent a letter to the Paramount Board
on October 28 requesting an opportunity to
negotiate with Paramount, and Oresman
responded the following day by agreeing to
meet. The meeting, held on November 1, was
not very fruitful, however, after QVC's
proposed guidelines for a "fair bidding
process" were rejected by Paramount on the
ground that "auction procedures" were
inappropriate and contrary to Paramount's
contractual obligations to Viacom.
On November 6, 1993, Viacom
unilaterally raised its tender offer price
to $85 per share in cash and offered a
comparable increase in the value of the
securities being proposed in the second-step
merger. At a telephonic meeting held later
that day, the Paramount Board agreed to
recommend Viacom's higher bid to Paramount's
stockholders.
QVC responded to Viacom's higher
bid on November 12 by increasing its tender
offer to $90 per share and by increasing the
securities for its second-step merger by a
similar amount. In response to QVC's latest
offer, the Paramount Board scheduled a
meeting for November 15, 1993. Prior to the
meeting, Oresman sent the members of the
Paramount Board a document summarizing the
"conditions and uncertainties" of QVC's
offer. One director testified that this
document gave him a very negative impression
of the QVC bid.
At its meeting on November 15,
1993, the Paramount Board determined that
the new QVC offer was not in the best
interests of the stockholders. The purported
basis for this conclusion was that QVC's bid
was excessively conditional. The Paramount
Board did not communicate with QVC regarding
the status of the conditions because it
believed that the No-Shop Provision
prevented such communication in the absence
of firm financing. Several Paramount
directors also testified that they believed
the Viacom transaction would be more
advantageous to Paramount's future business
prospects than a QVC transaction.
7 Although a number of
materials were distributed to the Paramount
Board describing the Viacom and QVC
transactions, the only quantitative analysis
of the consideration to be received by the
stockholders under each proposal was based
on then-current market prices of the
securities involved, not on the anticipated
value of such securities at the time when
the stockholders would receive them.
8
The preliminary injunction
hearing in this case took place on November
16, 1993. On November 19, Diller wrote to
the Paramount Board to inform it that QVC
had obtained financing commitments for its
tender offer and that there was no antitrust
obstacle to the offer. On November 24, 1993,
the Court of Chancery issued its decision
granting a preliminary injunction in favor
of QVC and the plaintiff stockholders. This
appeal followed.
II. APPLICABLE PRINCIPLES OF ESTABLISHED DELAWARE LAW
The General Corporation Law of
the State of Delaware (the "General
Corporation Law") and the decisions of this
Court have repeatedly recognized the
fundamental principle that the management of
the business and affairs of a Delaware
corporation is entrusted to its directors,
who are the duly elected and authorized
representatives of the
Page 42 stockholders. 8 Del.C. § 141(a); Aronson v.
Lewis, Del.Supr., 473 A.2d 805, 811-12
(1984); Pogostin v. Rice, Del.Supr., 480
A.2d 619, 624 (1984). Under normal
circumstances, neither the courts nor the
stockholders should interfere with the
managerial decisions of the directors. The
business judgment rule embodies the
deference to which such decisions are
entitled. Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812.
Nevertheless, there are rare
situations which mandate that a court take a
more direct and active role in overseeing
the decisions made and actions taken by
directors. In these situations, a court
subjects the directors' conduct to enhanced
scrutiny to ensure that it is reasonable.
9 The decisions of
this Court have clearly established the
circumstances where such enhanced scrutiny
will be applied. E.g., Unocal,
493 A.2d 946;
Moran v. Household Int'l, Inc., Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985); Revlon,
506 A.2d 173;
Mills Acquisition Co. v. Macmillan, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
559 A.2d 1261 (1989); Gilbert v.
El Paso Co., Del.Supr.,
575 A.2d 1131
(1990). The case at bar implicates two such
circumstances: (1) the approval of a
transaction resulting in a sale of control,
and (2) the adoption of defensive measures
in response to a threat to corporate
control.
A. The Significance of a Sale or Change
10 of Control
When a majority of a
corporation's voting shares are acquired by
a single person or entity, or by a cohesive
group acting together, there is a
significant diminution in the voting power
of those who thereby become minority
stockholders. Under the statutory framework
of the General Corporation Law, many of the
most fundamental corporate changes can be
implemented only if they are approved by a
majority vote of the stockholders. Such
actions include elections of directors,
amendments to the certificate of
incorporation, mergers, consolidations,
sales of all or substantially all of the
assets of the corporation, and dissolution.
8 Del.C. §§ 211, 242, 251-258, 263, 271,
275. Because of the overriding importance of
voting rights, this Court and the Court of
Chancery have consistently acted to protect
stockholders from unwarranted interference
with such rights.
11
In the absence of devices
protecting the minority stockholders,
12 stockholder votes are
likely to become mere formalities where
there is a majority stockholder. For
example, minority stockholders can be
deprived of a continuing equity interest in
their corporation by means of a cash-out
merger. Weinberger,
Page 43
457 A.2d at 703. Absent effective protective
provisions, minority stockholders must rely
for protection solely on the fiduciary
duties owed to them by the directors and the
majority stockholder, since the minority
stockholders have lost the power to
influence corporate direction through the
ballot. The acquisition of majority status
and the consequent privilege of exerting the
powers of majority ownership come at a
price. That price is usually a control
premium which recognizes not only the value
of a control block of shares, but also
compensates the minority stockholders for
their resulting loss of voting power.
In the case before us, the public
stockholders (in the aggregate) currently
own a majority of Paramount's voting stock.
Control of the corporation is not vested in
a single person, entity, or group, but
vested in the fluid aggregation of
unaffiliated stockholders. In the event the
Paramount-Viacom transaction is consummated,
the public stockholders will receive cash
and a minority equity voting position in the
surviving corporation. Following such
consummation, there will be a controlling
stockholder who will have the voting power
to: (a) elect directors; (b) cause a
break-up of the corporation; (c) merge it
with another company; (d) cash-out the
public stockholders; (e) amend the
certificate of incorporation; (f) sell all
or substantially all of the corporate
assets; or (g) otherwise alter materially
the nature of the corporation and the public
stockholders' interests. Irrespective of the
present Paramount Board's vision of a
long-term strategic alliance with Viacom,
the proposed sale of control would provide
the new controlling stockholder with the
power to alter that vision.
Because of the intended sale of
control, the Paramount-Viacom transaction
has economic consequences of considerable
significance to the Paramount stockholders.
Once control has shifted, the current
Paramount stockholders will have no leverage
in the future to demand another control
premium. As a result, the Paramount
stockholders are entitled to receive, and
should receive, a control premium and/or
protective devices of significant value.
There being no such protective provisions in
the Viacom-Paramount transaction, the
Paramount directors had an obligation to
take the maximum advantage of the current
opportunity to realize for the stockholders
the best value reasonably available.
B. The Obligations of Directors in a Sale or Change of Control Transaction
The consequences of a sale of
control impose special obligations on the
directors of a corporation.
13
In particular, they have the obligation of
acting reasonably to seek the transaction
offering the best value reasonably available
to the stockholders. The courts will apply
enhanced scrutiny to ensure that the
directors have acted reasonably. The
obligations of the directors and the
enhanced scrutiny of the courts are
well-established by the decisions of this
Court. The directors' fiduciary duties in a
sale of control context are those which
generally attach. In short, "the directors
must act in accordance with their
fundamental duties of care and loyalty."
Barkan v. Amsted Indus., Inc., Del.Supr.,
567 A.2d 1279, 1286 (1989). As we held in
Macmillan:
It is basic to our law that the
board of directors has the ultimate
responsibility for managing the business and
affairs of a corporation. In discharging
this function, the directors owe fiduciary
duties of care and loyalty to the
corporation and its shareholders. This
unremitting obligation extends equally to
board conduct in a sale of corporate
control.
Page 44
559 A.2d at 1280 (emphasis
supplied) (citations omitted).
In the sale of control context,
the directors must focus on one primary
objective--to secure the transaction
offering the best value reasonably available
for the stockholders--and they must exercise
their fiduciary duties to further that end.
The decisions of this Court have
consistently emphasized this goal. Revlon,
506 A.2d at 182 ("The duty of the board ...
[is] the maximization of the company's value
at a sale for the stockholders' benefit.");
Macmillan, 559 A.2d at 1288 ("[I]n a sale of
corporate control the responsibility of the
directors is to get the highest value
reasonably attainable for the
shareholders."); Barkan, 567 A.2d at 1286
("[T]he board must act in a neutral manner
to encourage the highest possible price for
shareholders."). See also Wilmington Trust
Co. v. Coulter, Del.Supr., 200 A.2d 441, 448
(1964) (in the context of the duty of a
trustee, "[w]hen all is equal ... it is
plain that the Trustee is bound to obtain
the best price obtainable").
In pursuing this objective, the
directors must be especially diligent. See
Citron v. Fairchild Camera and Instrument
Corp., Del.Supr., 569 A.2d 53, 66 (1989)
(discussing "a board's active and direct
role in the sale process"). In particular,
this Court has stressed the importance of
the board being adequately informed in
negotiating a sale of control: "The need for
adequate information is central to the
enlightened evaluation of a transaction that
a board must make." Barkan, 567 A.2d at
1287. This requirement is consistent with
the general principle that "directors have a
duty to inform themselves, prior to making a
business decision, of all material
information reasonably available to them."
Aronson, 473 A.2d at 812. See also Cede &
Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 634
A.2d 345, 367 (1993); Smith v. Van Gorkom,
Del.Supr., 488 A.2d 858, 872 (1985).
Moreover, the role of outside, independent
directors becomes particularly important
because of the magnitude of a sale of
control transaction and the possibility, in
certain cases, that management may not
necessarily be impartial. See Macmillan, 559
A.2d at 1285 (requiring "the intense
scrutiny and participation of the
independent directors").
Barkan teaches some of the
methods by which a board can fulfill its
obligation to seek the best value reasonably
available to the stockholders. 567 A.2d at
1286-87. These methods are designed to
determine the existence and viability of
possible alternatives. They include
conducting an auction, canvassing the
market, etc. Delaware law recognizes that
there is "no single blueprint" that
directors must follow. Id. at 1286-87;
Citron 569 A.2d at 68; Macmillan, 559 A.2d
at 1287.
In determining which alternative
provides the best value for the
stockholders, a board of directors is not
limited to considering only the amount of
cash involved, and is not required to ignore
totally its view of the future value of a
strategic alliance. See Macmillan, 559 A.2d
at 1282 n. 29. Instead, the directors should
analyze the entire situation and evaluate in
a disciplined manner the consideration being
offered. Where stock or other non-cash
consideration is involved, the board should
try to quantify its value, if feasible, to
achieve an objective comparison of the
alternatives.
14
In addition, the board may assess a variety
of practical considerations relating to each
alternative, including:
[an offer's] fairness and feasibility;
the proposed or actual financing for the
offer, and the consequences of that
financing; questions of illegality; ... the
risk of non-consum[m]ation; ... the bidder's
identity, prior background and other
business venture experiences; and the
bidder's business plans for the corporation
and their effects on stockholder interests.
Macmillan, 559 A.2d at 1282 n.
29. These considerations are important
because the selection of one alternative may
permanently foreclose other opportunities.
While the assessment of these factors may be
complex,
Page 45 the board's goal is straightforward: Having
informed themselves of all material
information reasonably available, the
directors must decide which alternative is
most likely to offer the best value
reasonably available to the stockholders.
C. Enhanced Judicial Scrutiny of a Sale or Change of Control Transaction
Board action in the circumstances
presented here is subject to enhanced
scrutiny. Such scrutiny is mandated by: (a)
the threatened diminution of the current
stockholders' voting power; (b) the fact
that an asset belonging to public
stockholders (a control premium) is being
sold and may never be available again; and
(c) the traditional concern of Delaware
courts for actions which impair or impede
stockholder voting rights (see supra note
11). In Macmillan, this Court held:
When Revlon duties devolve upon
directors, this Court will continue to exact
an enhanced judicial scrutiny at the
threshold, as in Unocal, before the normal
presumptions of the business judgment rule
will apply.
15
559 A.2d at 1288. The Macmillan
decision articulates a specific two-part
test for analyzing board action where
competing bidders are not treated equally:
16
In the face of disparate
treatment, the trial court must first
examine whether the directors properly
perceived that shareholder interests were
enhanced. In any event the board's action
must be reasonable in relation to the
advantage sought to be achieved, or
conversely, to the threat which a particular
bid allegedly poses to stockholder
interests.
Id. See also Roberts v. General
Instrument Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 11639,
1990 WL 118356, Allen, C. (Aug. 13, 1990),
reprinted at 16 Del.J.Corp.L. 1540, 1554
("This enhanced test requires a judicial
judgment of reasonableness in the
circumstances.").
The key features of an enhanced
scrutiny test are: (a) a judicial
determination regarding the adequacy of the
decisionmaking process employed by the
directors, including the information on
which the directors based their decision;
and (b) a judicial examination of the
reasonableness of the directors' action in
light of the circumstances then existing.
The directors have the burden of proving
that they were adequately informed and acted
reasonably.
Although an enhanced scrutiny
test involves a review of the reasonableness
of the substantive merits of a board's
actions,
17 a
court should not ignore the complexity of
the directors' task in a sale of control.
There are many business and financial
considerations implicated in investigating
and selecting the best value reasonably
available. The board of directors is the
corporate decisionmaking body best equipped
to make these judgments. Accordingly, a
court applying enhanced judicial scrutiny
should be deciding whether the directors
made a reasonable decision, not a perfect
decision. If a board selected one of several
reasonable alternatives, a court should not
second-guess that choice even though it
might have decided otherwise or subsequent
events may have cast doubt on the board's
determination. Thus, courts will not
substitute their business judgment for that
of the directors, but will determine if the
directors' decision was, on balance, within
a range of reasonableness.
Page 46 See Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955-56; Macmillan,
559 A.2d at 1288; Nixon, 626 A.2d at 1378.
D. Revlon and Time-Warner Distinguished
The Paramount defendants and
Viacom assert that the fiduciary obligations
and the enhanced judicial scrutiny discussed
above are not implicated in this case in the
absence of a "break-up" of the corporation,
and that the order granting the preliminary
injunction should be reversed. This argument
is based on their erroneous interpretation
of our decisions in Revlon and Time-Warner.
In Revlon, we reviewed the
actions of the board of directors of Revlon,
Inc. ("Revlon"), which had rebuffed the
overtures of Pantry Pride, Inc. and had
instead entered into an agreement with
Forstmann Little & Co. ("Forstmann")
providing for the acquisition of 100 percent
of Revlon's outstanding stock by Forstmann
and the subsequent break-up of Revlon. Based
on the facts and circumstances present in
Revlon, we held that "[t]he directors' role
changed from defenders of the corporate
bastion to auctioneers charged with getting
the best price for the stockholders at a
sale of the company." 506 A.2d at 182. We
further held that "when a board ends an
intense bidding contest on an insubstantial
basis, ... [that] action cannot withstand
the enhanced scrutiny which Unocal requires
of director conduct." Id. at 184.
It is true that one of the
circumstances bearing on these holdings was
the fact that "the break-up of the company
... had become a reality which even the
directors embraced." Id. at 182. It does not
follow, however, that a "break-up" must be
present and "inevitable" before directors
are subject to enhanced judicial scrutiny
and are required to pursue a transaction
that is calculated to produce the best value
reasonably available to the stockholders. In
fact, we stated in Revlon that "when bidders
make relatively similar offers, or
dissolution of the company becomes
inevitable, the directors cannot fulfill
their enhanced Unocal duties by playing
favorites with the contending factions." Id.
at 184 (emphasis added). Revlon thus does
not hold that an inevitable dissolution or
"break-up" is necessary.
The decisions of this Court
following Revlon reinforced the
applicability of enhanced scrutiny and the
directors' obligation to seek the best value
reasonably available for the stockholders
where there is a pending sale of control,
regardless of whether or not there is to be
a break-up of the corporation. In Macmillan,
this Court held:
We stated in Revlon, and again here, that
in a sale of corporate control the
responsibility of the directors is to get
the highest value reasonably attainable for
the shareholders.
559 A.2d at 1288 (emphasis
added). In Barkan, we observed further:
We believe that the general principles
announced in Revlon, in Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946
(1985), and in Moran v. Household
International, Inc., Del.Supr.,
500 A.2d 1346 (1985) govern this case and every case
in which a fundamental change of corporate
control occurs or is contemplated.
567 A.2d at 1286 (emphasis
added).
Although Macmillan and Barkan are
clear in holding that a change of control
imposes on directors the obligation to
obtain the best value reasonably available
to the stockholders, the Paramount
defendants have interpreted our decision in
Time-Warner as requiring a corporate
break-up in order for that obligation to
apply. The facts in Time-Warner, however,
were quite different from the facts of this
case, and refute Paramount's position here.
In Time-Warner, the Chancellor held that
there was no change of control in the
original stock-for-stock merger between Time
and Warner because Time would be owned by a
fluid aggregation of unaffiliated
stockholders both before and after the
merger:
If the appropriate inquiry is
whether a change in control is contemplated,
the answer must be sought in the specific
circumstances surrounding the transaction.
Surely under some circumstances a stock for
stock merger could reflect a transfer of
corporate control. That would, for example,
plainly be the case here if Warner were a
private company. But where, as
Page 47 here, the shares of both constituent
corporations are widely held, corporate
control can be expected to remain unaffected
by a stock for stock merger. This in my
judgment was the situation with respect to
the original merger agreement. When the
specifics of that situation are reviewed, it
is seen that, aside from legal
technicalities and aside from arrangements
thought to enhance the prospect for the
ultimate succession of [Nicholas J.
Nicholas, Jr., president of Time], neither
corporation could be said to be acquiring
the other. Control of both remained in a
large, fluid, changeable and changing
market.
The existence of a control block
of stock in the hands of a single
shareholder or a group with loyalty to each
other does have real consequences to the
financial value of "minority" stock. The law
offers some protection to such shares
through the imposition of a fiduciary duty
upon controlling shareholders. But here,
effectuation of the merger would not have
subjected Time shareholders to the risks and
consequences of holders of minority shares.
This is a reflection of the fact that no
control passed to anyone in the transaction
contemplated. The shareholders of Time would
have "suffered" dilution, of course, but
they would suffer the same type of dilution
upon the public distribution of new stock.
Paramount Communications Inc. v.
Time Inc., Del.Ch., No. 10866, 1989 WL
79880, Allen, C. (July 17, 1989), reprinted
at 15 Del.J.Corp.L. 700, 739 (emphasis
added). Moreover, the transaction actually
consummated in Time-Warner was not a merger,
as originally planned, but a sale of
Warner's stock to Time.
In our affirmance of the Court of
Chancery's well-reasoned decision, this
Court held that "The Chancellor's findings
of fact are supported by the record and his
conclusion is correct as a matter of law."
571 A.2d at 1150 (emphasis added).
Nevertheless, the Paramount defendants here
have argued that a break-up is a requirement
and have focused on the following language
in our Time-Warner decision:
However, we premise our rejection of
plaintiffs' Revlon claim on different
grounds, namely, the absence of any
substantial evidence to conclude that Time's
board, in negotiating with Warner, made the
dissolution or break-up of the corporate
entity inevitable, as was the case in
Revlon.
Under Delaware law there are,
generally speaking and without excluding
other possibilities, two circumstances which
may implicate Revlon duties. The first, and
clearer one, is when a corporation initiates
an active bidding process seeking to sell
itself or to effect a business
reorganization involving a clear break-up of
the company. However, Revlon duties may also
be triggered where, in response to a
bidder's offer, a target abandons its
long-term strategy and seeks an alternative
transaction involving the breakup of the
company.
Id. at 1150 (emphasis added)
(citation and footnote omitted).
The Paramount defendants have
misread the holding of Time-Warner. Contrary
to their argument, our decision in
Time-Warner expressly states that the two
general scenarios discussed in the
above-quoted paragraph are not the only
instances where "Revlon duties" may be
implicated. The Paramount defendants'
argument totally ignores the phrase "without
excluding other possibilities." Moreover,
the instant case is clearly within the first
general scenario set forth in Time-Warner.
The Paramount Board, albeit unintentionally,
had "initiate[d] an active bidding process
seeking to sell itself" by agreeing to sell
control of the corporation to Viacom in
circumstances where another potential
acquiror (QVC) was equally interested in
being a bidder.
The Paramount defendants'
position that both a change of control and a
break-up are required must be rejected. Such
a holding would unduly restrict the
application of Revlon, is inconsistent with
this Court's decisions in Barkan and
Macmillan, and has no basis in policy. There
are few events that have a more significant
impact on the stockholders than a sale of
control or a corporate break-up. Each event
represents a fundamental
Page 48 (and perhaps irrevocable) change in the
nature of the corporate enterprise from a
practical standpoint. It is the significance
of each of these events that justifies: (a)
focusing on the directors' obligation to
seek the best value reasonably available to
the stockholders; and (b) requiring a close
scrutiny of board action which could be
contrary to the stockholders' interests.
Accordingly, when a corporation
undertakes a transaction which will cause:
(a) a change in corporate control; or (b) a
break-up of the corporate entity, the
directors' obligation is to seek the best
value reasonably available to the
stockholders. This obligation arises because
the effect of the Viacom-Paramount
transaction, if consummated, is to shift
control of Paramount from the public
stockholders to a controlling stockholder,
Viacom. Neither Time-Warner nor any other
decision of this Court holds that a
"break-up" of the company is essential to
give rise to this obligation where there is
a sale of control.
III. BREACH OF FIDUCIARY DUTIES BY PARAMOUNT BOARD
We now turn to duties of the
Paramount Board under the facts of this case
and our conclusions as to the breaches of
those duties which warrant injunctive
relief.
A. The Specific Obligations of
the Paramount Board
Under the facts of this case, the
Paramount directors had the obligation: (a)
to be diligent and vigilant in examining
critically the Paramount-Viacom transaction
and the QVC tender offers; (b) to act in
good faith; (c) to obtain, and act with due
care on, all material information reasonably
available, including information necessary
to compare the two offers to determine which
of these transactions, or an alternative
course of action, would provide the best
value reasonably available to the
stockholders; and (d) to negotiate actively
and in good faith with both Viacom and QVC
to that end.
Having decided to sell control of
the corporation, the Paramount directors
were required to evaluate critically whether
or not all material aspects of the
Paramount-Viacom transaction (separately and
in the aggregate) were reasonable and in the
best interests of the Paramount stockholders
in light of current circumstances,
including: the change of control premium,
the Stock Option Agreement, the Termination
Fee, the coercive nature of both the Viacom
and QVC tender offers,
18
the No-Shop Provision, and the proposed
disparate use of the Rights Agreement as to
the Viacom and QVC tender offers,
respectively.
These obligations necessarily
implicated various issues, including the
questions of whether or not those provisions
and other aspects of the Paramount-Viacom
transaction (separately and in the
aggregate): (a) adversely affected the value
provided to the Paramount stockholders; (b)
inhibited or encouraged alternative bids;
(c) were enforceable contractual obligations
in light of the directors' fiduciary duties;
and (d) in the end would advance or retard
the Paramount directors' obligation to
secure for the Paramount stockholders the
best value reasonably available under the
circumstances.
The Paramount defendants contend
that they were precluded by certain
contractual provisions, including the
No-Shop Provision, from negotiating with QVC
or seeking alternatives. Such provisions,
whether or not they are presumptively valid
in the abstract, may not validly define or
limit the directors' fiduciary duties under
Delaware law or prevent the Paramount
directors from carrying out their fiduciary
duties under Delaware law. To the extent
such provisions are inconsistent with those
duties, they are invalid and unenforceable.
See Revlon, 506 A.2d at 184-85.
Since the Paramount directors had
already decided to sell control, they had an
obligation
Page 49 to continue their search for the best value
reasonably available to the stockholders.
This continuing obligation included the
responsibility, at the October 24 board
meeting and thereafter, to evaluate
critically both the QVC tender offers and
the Paramount-Viacom transaction to
determine if: (a) the QVC tender offer was,
or would continue to be, conditional; (b)
the QVC tender offer could be improved; (c)
the Viacom tender offer or other aspects of
the Paramount-Viacom transaction could be
improved; (d) each of the respective offers
would be reasonably likely to come to
closure, and under what circumstances; (e)
other material information was reasonably
available for consideration by the Paramount
directors; (f) there were viable and
realistic alternative courses of action; and
(g) the timing constraints could be managed
so the directors could consider these
matters carefully and deliberately.
B. The Breaches of Fiduciary Duty by the Paramount Board
The Paramount directors made the
decision on September 12, 1993, that, in
their judgment, a strategic merger with
Viacom on the economic terms of the Original
Merger Agreement was in the best interests
of Paramount and its stockholders. Those
terms provided a modest change of control
premium to the stockholders. The directors
also decided at that time that it was
appropriate to agree to certain defensive
measures (the Stock Option Agreement, the
Termination Fee, and the No-Shop Provision)
insisted upon by Viacom as part of that
economic transaction. Those defensive
measures, coupled with the sale of control
and subsequent disparate treatment of
competing bidders, implicated the judicial
scrutiny of Unocal, Revlon, Macmillan, and
their progeny. We conclude that the
Paramount directors' process was not
reasonable, and the result achieved for the
stockholders was not reasonable under the
circumstances.
When entering into the Original
Merger Agreement, and thereafter, the
Paramount Board clearly gave insufficient
attention to the potential consequences of
the defensive measures demanded by Viacom.
The Stock Option Agreement had a number of
unusual and potentially "draconian"
19 provisions, including
the Note Feature and the Put Feature.
Furthermore, the Termination Fee, whether or
not unreasonable by itself, clearly made
Paramount less attractive to other bidders,
when coupled with the Stock Option
Agreement. Finally, the No-Shop Provision
inhibited the Paramount Board's ability to
negotiate with other potential bidders,
particularly QVC which had already expressed
an interest in Paramount.
20
Throughout the applicable time
period, and especially from the first QVC
merger proposal on September 20 through the
Paramount Board meeting on November 15,
QVC's interest in Paramount provided the
opportunity for the Paramount Board to seek
significantly higher value for the Paramount
stockholders than that being offered by
Viacom. QVC persistently demonstrated its
intention to meet and exceed the Viacom
offers, and
Page 50 frequently expressed its willingness to
negotiate possible further increases.
The Paramount directors had the
opportunity in the October 23-24 time frame,
when the Original Merger Agreement was
renegotiated, to take appropriate action to
modify the improper defensive measures as
well as to improve the economic terms of the
Paramount-Viacom transaction. Under the
circumstances existing at that time, it
should have been clear to the Paramount
Board that the Stock Option Agreement,
coupled with the Termination Fee and the
No-Shop Clause, were impeding the
realization of the best value reasonably
available to the Paramount stockholders.
Nevertheless, the Paramount Board made no
effort to eliminate or modify these
counterproductive devices, and instead
continued to cling to its vision of a
strategic alliance with Viacom. Moreover,
based on advice from the Paramount
management, the Paramount directors
considered the QVC offer to be "conditional"
and asserted that they were precluded by the
No-Shop Provision from seeking more
information from, or negotiating with, QVC.
By November 12, 1993, the value
of the revised QVC offer on its face
exceeded that of the Viacom offer by over $1
billion at then current values. This
significant disparity of value cannot be
justified on the basis of the directors'
vision of future strategy, primarily because
the change of control would supplant the
authority of the current Paramount Board to
continue to hold and implement their
strategic vision in any meaningful way.
Moreover, their uninformed process had
deprived their strategic vision of much of
its credibility. See Van Gorkom, 488 A.2d at
872;
Cede v. Technicolor, 634 A.2d at 367;
Hanson Trust PLC v. ML SCM Acquisition Inc.,
2d Cir., 781 F.2d 264, 274 (1986).
When the Paramount directors met
on November 15 to consider QVC's increased
tender offer, they remained prisoners of
their own misconceptions and missed
opportunities to eliminate the restrictions
they had imposed on themselves. Yet, it was
not "too late" to reconsider negotiating
with QVC. The circumstances existing on
November 15 made it clear that the defensive
measures, taken as a whole, were
problematic: (a) the No-Shop Provision could
not define or limit their fiduciary duties;
(b) the Stock Option Agreement had become
"draconian"; and (c) the Termination Fee, in
context with all the circumstances, was
similarly deterring the realization of
possibly higher bids. Nevertheless, the
Paramount directors remained paralyzed by
their uninformed belief that the QVC offer
was "illusory." This final opportunity to
negotiate on the stockholders' behalf and to
fulfill their obligation to seek the best
value reasonably available was thereby
squandered.
21
IV. VIACOM'S CLAIM OF VESTED CONTRACT
RIGHTS
Viacom argues that it had certain
"vested" contract rights with respect to the
No-Shop Provision and the Stock Option
Agreement.
22 In
effect, Viacom's argument is that the
Paramount directors could enter into an
agreement in violation of their fiduciary
duties and then render Paramount, and
ultimately its stockholders, liable for
failing to carry out an agreement in
violation of those duties. Viacom's
protestations about vested rights are
without merit. This Court has found that
those defensive measures were improperly
designed to deter potential bidders, and
that
Page 51 such measures do not meet the reasonableness
test to which they must be subjected. They
are consequently invalid and unenforceable
under the facts of this case.
The No-Shop Provision could not
validly define or limit the fiduciary duties
of the Paramount directors. To the extent
that a contract, or a provision thereof,
purports to require a board to act or not
act in such a fashion as to limit the
exercise of fiduciary duties, it is invalid
and unenforceable.
Wilmington Trust v. Coulter, 200 A.2d at
452-54. Despite the arguments of
Paramount and Viacom to the contrary, the
Paramount directors could not contract away
their fiduciary obligations. Since the
No-Shop Provision was invalid, Viacom never
had any vested contract rights in the
provision.
As discussed previously, the
Stock Option Agreement contained several
"draconian" aspects, including the Note
Feature and the Put Feature. While we have
held that lock-up options are not per se
illegal, see Revlon, 506 A.2d at 183, no
options with similar features have ever been
upheld by this Court. Under the
circumstances of this case, the Stock Option
Agreement clearly is invalid. Accordingly,
Viacom never had any vested contract rights
in that Agreement.
Viacom, a sophisticated party
with experienced legal and financial
advisors, knew of (and in fact demanded) the
unreasonable features of the Stock Option
Agreement. It cannot be now heard to argue
that it obtained vested contract rights by
negotiating and obtaining contractual
provisions from a board acting in violation
of its fiduciary duties. As the Nebraska
Supreme Court said in rejecting a similar
argument
ConAgra, Inc. v. Cargill, Inc., 222 Neb.
136, 382 N.W.2d 576, 587-88 (1986), "To
so hold, it would seem, would be to get the
shareholders coming and going." Likewise, we
reject Viacom's arguments and hold that its
fate must rise or fall, and in this instance
fall, with the determination that the
actions of the Paramount Board were invalid.
V. CONCLUSION
The realization of the best value
reasonably available to the stockholders
became the Paramount directors' primary
obligation under these facts in light of the
change of control. That obligation was not
satisfied, and the Paramount Board's process
was deficient. The directors' initial hope
and expectation for a strategic alliance
with Viacom was allowed to dominate their
decisionmaking process to the point where
the arsenal of defensive measures
established at the outset was perpetuated
(not modified or eliminated) when the
situation was dramatically altered. QVC's
unsolicited bid presented the opportunity
for significantly greater value for the
stockholders and enhanced negotiating
leverage for the directors. Rather than
seizing those opportunities, the Paramount
directors chose to wall themselves off from
material information which was reasonably
available and to hide behind the defensive
measures as a rationalization for refusing
to negotiate with QVC or seeking other
alternatives. Their view of the strategic
alliance likewise became an empty
rationalization as the opportunities for
higher value for the stockholders continued
to develop.
It is the nature of the judicial
process that we decide only the case before
us--a case which, on its facts, is clearly
controlled by established Delaware law.
Here, the proposed change of control and the
implications thereof were crystal clear. In
other cases they may be less clear. The
holding of this case on its facts, coupled
with the holdings of the principal cases
discussed herein where the issue of sale of
control is implicated, should provide a
workable precedent against which to measure
future cases.
For the reasons set forth herein,
the November 24, 1993, Order of the Court of
Chancery has been AFFIRMED, and this matter
has been REMANDED for proceedings consistent
herewith, as set forth in the December 9,
1993, Order of this Court.
ADDENDUM
The record in this case is
extensive. The appendix filed in this Court
comprises 15 volumes, totalling some 7251
pages. It includes
Page 52 substantial deposition testimony which forms
part of the factual record before the Court
of Chancery and before this Court. The
members of this Court have read and
considered the appendix, including the
deposition testimony, in reaching its
decision, preparing the Order of December 9,
1993, and this opinion. Likewise, the Vice
Chancellor's opinion revealed that he was
thoroughly familiar with the entire record,
including the deposition testimony. As
noted, supra p. 37 note 2, the Court has
commended the parties for their
professionalism in conducting expedited
discovery, assembling and organizing the
record, and preparing and presenting very
helpful briefs, a joint appendix, and oral
argument.
The Court is constrained,
however, to add this Addendum. Although this
Addendum has no bearing on the outcome of
the case, it relates to a serious issue of
professionalism involving deposition
practice in proceedings in Delaware trial
courts.
23
The issue of discovery abuse,
including lack of civility and professional
misconduct during depositions, is a matter
of considerable concern to Delaware courts
and courts around the nation.
24
One particular instance of misconduct during
a deposition in this case demonstrates such
an astonishing lack of professionalism and
civility that it is worthy of special note
here as a lesson for the future--a lesson of
conduct not to be tolerated or repeated.
On November 10, 1993, an
expedited deposition of Paramount, through
one of its directors, J. Hugh Liedtke,
25 was taken in
the state of Texas. The deposition was taken
by Delaware counsel for QVC. Mr. Liedtke was
individually represented at this deposition
by Joseph D. Jamail, Esquire, of the Texas
Bar. Peter C. Thomas, Esquire, of the New
York Bar appeared and defended on behalf of
the Paramount defendants. It does not appear
that any member of the Delaware bar was
present at the deposition representing any
of the defendants or the stockholder
plaintiffs.
Mr. Jamail did not otherwise
appear in this Delaware proceeding
representing any party, and he was not
admitted pro hac vice.
26
Page 53 Under the rules of the Court of Chancery and
this Court,
27
lawyers who are admitted pro hac vice to
represent a party in Delaware proceedings
are subject to Delaware Disciplinary Rules,
28 and are
required to review the Delaware State Bar
Association Statement of Principles of
Lawyer Conduct (the "Statement of
Principles").
29
During the Liedtke deposition, Mr. Jamail
abused the privilege of representing a
witness in a Delaware proceeding, in that
he: (a) improperly directed the witness not
to answer certain questions; (b) was
extraordinarily rude, uncivil, and vulgar;
and (c) obstructed the ability of the
questioner to elicit testimony to assist the
Court in this matter.
To illustrate, a few excerpts
from the latter stages of the Liedtke
deposition follow:
A. [Mr. Liedtke] I vaguely recall
[Mr. Oresman's letter].... I think I did
read it, probably.
....
Q. (By Mr. Johnston [Delaware
counsel for QVC] ) Okay. Do you have any
idea why Mr. Oresman was calling that
material to your attention?
MR. JAMAIL: Don't answer that.
How would he know what was going
on in Mr. Oresman's mind?
Don't answer it.
Go on to your next question.
MR. JOHNSTON: No, Joe--
MR. JAMAIL: He's not going to
answer that. Certify it. I'm going to shut
it down if you don't go to your next
question.
Page 54
MR. JOHNSTON: No. Joe, Joe--
MR. JAMAIL: Don't "Joe" me,
asshole. You can ask some questions, but get
off of that. I'm tired of you. You could gag
a maggot off a meat wagon. Now, we've helped
you every way we can.
MR. JOHNSTON: Let's just take it
easy.
MR. JAMAIL: No, we're not going
to take it easy. Get done with this.
MR. JOHNSTON: We will go on to
the next question.
MR. JAMAIL: Do it now.
MR. JOHNSTON: We will go on to
the next question. We're not trying to
excite anyone.
MR. JAMAIL: Come on. Quit
talking. Ask the question. Nobody wants to
socialize with you.
MR. JOHNSTON: I'm not trying to
socialize. We'll go on to another question.
We're continuing the deposition.
MR. JAMAIL: Well, go on and shut
up.
MR. JOHNSTON: Are you finished?
MR. JAMAIL: Yeah, you--
MR. JOHNSTON: Are you finished?
MR. JAMAIL: I may be and you may
be. Now, you want to sit here and talk to
me, fine. This deposition is going to be
over with. You don't know what you're doing.
Obviously someone wrote out a long outline
of stuff for you to ask. You have no concept
of what you're doing.
Now, I've tolerated you for three
hours. If you've got another question, get
on with it. This is going to stop one hour
from now, period. Go.
MR. JOHNSTON: Are you finished?
MR. THOMAS: Come on, Mr.
Johnston, move it.
MR. JOHNSTON: I don't need this
kind of abuse.
MR. THOMAS: Then just ask the
next question.
Q. (By Mr. Johnston) All right.
To try to move forward, Mr. Liedtke, ...
I'll show you what's been marked as Liedtke
14 and it is a covering letter dated October
29 from Steven Cohen of Wachtell, Lipton,
Rosen & Katz including QVC's Amendment
Number 1 to its Schedule 14D-1, and my
question--
A. No.
Q. --to you, sir, is whether
you've seen that?
A. No. Look, I don't know what
your intent in asking all these questions
is, but, my God, I am not going to play boy
lawyer.
Q. Mr. Liedtke--
A. Okay. Go ahead and ask your
question.
Q. --I'm trying to move forward
in this deposition that we are entitled to
take. I'm trying to streamline it.
MR. JAMAIL: Come on with your
next question. Don't even talk with this
witness.
MR. JOHNSTON: I'm trying to move
forward with it.
MR. JAMAIL: You understand me?
Don't talk to this witness except by
question. Did you hear me?
MR. JOHNSTON: I heard you fine.
MR. JAMAIL: You fee makers think
you can come here and sit in somebody's
office, get your meter running, get your
full day's fee by asking stupid questions.
Let's go with it.
(JA 6002-06).
30
Staunch advocacy on behalf of a
client is proper and fully consistent with
the finest effectuation of skill and
professionalism. Indeed, it is a mark of
professionalism, not weakness, for a lawyer
zealously and firmly to protect and pursue a
client's legitimate interests by a
professional, courteous, and civil attitude
toward all persons involved in the
litigation process. A lawyer who engages in
the type of behavior exemplified by Mr.
Jamail on the record of the Liedtke
deposition is not properly representing his
client, and the client's cause is not
advanced by a lawyer who engages in
unprofessional conduct of this nature. It
happens that in this case there was no
application to the Court, and the parties
and the witness do not
Page 55 appear to have been prejudiced by this
misconduct.
31
Nevertheless, the Court finds
this unprofessional behavior to be
outrageous and unacceptable. If a Delaware
lawyer had engaged in the kind of misconduct
committed by Mr. Jamail on this record, that
lawyer would have been subject to censure or
more serious sanctions.
32
While the specter of disciplinary
proceedings should not be used by the
parties as a litigation tactic,
33 conduct such as that
involved here goes to the heart of the trial
court proceedings themselves. As such, it
cries out for relief under the trial court's
rules, including Ch. Ct. R. 37. Under some
circumstances, the use of the trial court's
inherent summary contempt powers may be
appropriate.
In re Butler, Del.Supr., 609 A.2d 1080, 1082
(1992).
Although busy and overburdened,
Delaware trial courts are "but a phone call
away" and would be responsive to the plight
of a party and its counsel bearing the brunt
of such misconduct.
34
It is not appropriate for this Court to
prescribe in the abstract any particular
remedy or to provide an exclusive list of
remedies under such circumstances. We assume
that the trial courts of this State would
consider protective orders and the sanctions
permitted by the discovery rules. Sanctions
could include exclusion of obstreperous
counsel from attending the deposition
(whether or not he or she has been admitted
pro hac vice ), ordering the deposition
recessed and reconvened promptly in
Delaware, or the appointment of a master to
preside at the deposition. Costs and counsel
fees should follow.
As noted, this was a deposition
of Paramount through one of its directors.
Mr. Liedtke was a Paramount witness in every
respect. He was not there either as an
individual defendant or as a third party
witness. Pursuant to Ch. Ct. R. 170(d), the
Paramount defendants should have been
represented at the deposition by a Delaware
lawyer or a lawyer admitted pro hac vice. A
Delaware lawyer who moves the admission pro
hac vice of an out-of-state lawyer is not
relieved of responsibility, is required to
appear at all court proceedings (except
depositions when a lawyer admitted pro hac
vice is present), shall certify that the
lawyer appearing
Page 56 pro hac vice is reputable and competent, and
that the Delaware lawyer is in a position to
recommend the out-of-state lawyer.
35 Thus, one of the
principal purposes of the pro hac vice rules
is to assure that, if a Delaware lawyer is
not to be present at a deposition, the
lawyer admitted pro hac vice will be there.
As such, he is an officer of the Delaware
Court, subject to control of the Court to
ensure the integrity of the proceeding.
Counsel attending the Liedtke
deposition on behalf of the Paramount
defendants had an obligation to ensure the
integrity of that proceeding. The record of
the deposition as a whole (JA 5916-6054)
demonstrates that, not only Mr. Jamail, but
also Mr. Thomas (representing the Paramount
defendants), continually interrupted the
questioning, engaged in colloquies and
objections which sometimes suggested answers
to questions,
36
and constantly pressed the questioner for
time throughout the deposition.
37 As to Mr. Jamail's tactics
quoted above, Mr. Thomas passively let
matters proceed as they did, and at times
even added his own voice to support the
behavior of Mr. Jamail. A Delaware lawyer or
a lawyer admitted pro hac vice would have
been expected to put an end to the
misconduct in the Liedtke deposition.
This kind of misconduct is not to
be tolerated in any Delaware court
proceeding, including depositions taken in
other states in which witnesses appear
represented by their own counsel other than
counsel for a party in the proceeding. Yet,
there is no clear mechanism for this Court
to deal with this matter in terms of
sanctions or disciplinary remedies at this
time in the context of this case.
Nevertheless, consideration will be given to
the following issues for the future: (a)
whether or not it is appropriate and fair to
take into account the behavior of Mr. Jamail
in this case in the event application is
made by him in the future to appear pro hac
vice in any Delaware proceeding;
38 and (b) what rules or
standards should be adopted to deal
effectively with misconduct by out-of-state
lawyers in depositions in proceedings
pending in Delaware courts.
As to (a), this Court will
welcome a voluntary appearance by Mr. Jamail
if a request is received from him by the
Clerk of this Court within thirty days of
the date of this Opinion and Addendum. The
purpose of such voluntary appearance will be
to explain the questioned conduct and to
show cause why such conduct should not be
considered as a bar to any future appearance
by Mr. Jamail in a Delaware proceeding. As
to (b), this Court and the trial courts of
this State will undertake to strengthen the
existing mechanisms for dealing with the
type of misconduct referred
Page 57 to in this Addendum and the practices
relating to admissions pro hac vice.
1 We accepted this expedited
interlocutory appeal on November 29, 1993.
After briefing and oral argument in this
Court held on December 9, 1993, we issued
our December 9 Order affirming the November
24 Order of the Court of Chancery. In our
December 9 Order, we stated, "It is not
feasible, because of the exigencies of time,
for this Court to complete an opinion
setting forth more comprehensively the
rationale of the Court's decision. Unless
otherwise ordered by the Court, such an
opinion will follow in due course." December
9 Order at 3. This is the opinion referred
to therein.
2 It is important to put the Addendum in
perspective. This Court notes and has noted
its appreciation of the outstanding judicial
workmanship of the Vice Chancellor and the
professionalism of counsel in this matter in
handling this expedited litigation with the
expertise and skill which characterize
Delaware proceedings of this nature. The
misconduct noted in the Addendum is an
aberration which is not to be tolerated in
any Delaware proceeding.
3 This Court's standard and scope of
review as to facts on appeal from a
preliminary injunction is whether, after
independently reviewing the entire record,
we can conclude that the findings of the
Court of Chancery are sufficiently supported
by the record and are the product of an
orderly and logical deductive process.
Ivanhoe Partners v. Newmont Mining Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1334, 1342-41 (1987).
4 Grace J. Fippinger, a former Vice
President, Secretary and Treasurer of NYNEX
Corporation, and director of Pfizer, Inc.,
Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company,
and The Bear Stearns Companies, Inc.
Irving R. Fischer, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of HRH Construction
Corporation, Vice Chairman of the New York
City Chapter of the National Multiple
Sclerosis Society, a member of the New York
City Holocaust Memorial Commission, and an
Adjunct Professor of Urban Planning at
Columbia University
Benjamin L. Hooks, Senior Vice President
of the Chapman Company and director of
Maxima Corporation
J. Hugh Liedtke, Chairman of Pennzoil
Company
Franz J. Lutolf, former General Manager
and a member of the Executive Board of Swiss
Bank Corporation, and director of Grapha
Holding AG, Hergiswil (Switzerland), Banco
Santander (Suisse) S.A., Geneva, Diawa
Securities Bank (Switzerland), Zurich, Cheak
Coast Helarb European Acquisitions S.A.,
Luxembourg Internationale Nederlanden Bank
(Switzerland), Zurich
James A. Pattison, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of the Jim Pattison Group,
and director of the Toronto-Dominion Bank,
Canadian Pacific Ltd., and Toyota's Canadian
subsidiary
Lester Pollack, General Partner of Lazard
Freres & Co., Chief Executive Officer of
Center Partners, and Senior Managing
Director of Corporate Partners, investment
affiliates of Lazard Freres, director of
Loews Corp., CNA Financial Corp., Sunamerica
Corp., Kaufman & Broad Home Corp., Parlex
Corp., Transco Energy Company, Polaroid
Corp., Continental Cablevision, Inc., and
Tidewater Inc., and Trustee of New York
University
Irwin Schloss, Senior Advisor, Marcus
Schloss & Company, Inc.
Samuel J. Silberman, Retired Chairman of
Consolidated Cigar Corporation
Lawrence M. Small, President and Chief
Operating Officer of the Federal National
Mortgage Association, director of Fannie Mae
and the Chubb Corporation, and trustee of
Morehouse College and New York University
Medical Center
George Weissman, retired Chairman and
Consultant of Philip Morris Companies, Inc.,
director of Avnet, Incorporated, and
Chairman of Lincoln Center for the
Performing Arts, Inc.
5 By November 15, 1993, the value of the
Stock Option Agreement had increased to
nearly $500 million based on the $90 QVC
bid. See Court of Chancery Opinion, 635 A.2d
1245, 1271.
6 Under the Amended Merger Agreement and
the Paramount Board's resolutions approving
it, no further action of the Paramount Board
would be required in order for Paramount's
Rights Agreement to be amended. As a result,
the proper officers of the company were
authorized to implement the amendment unless
they were instructed otherwise by the
Paramount Board.
7 This belief may have been based on a
report prepared by Booz-Allen and
distributed to the Paramount Board at its
October 24 meeting. The report, which relied
on public information regarding QVC,
concluded that the synergies of a
Paramount-Viacom merger were significantly
superior to those of a Paramount-QVC merger.
QVC has labelled the Booz-Allen report as a
"joke."
8 The market prices of Viacom's and QVC's
stock were poor measures of their actual
values because such prices constantly
fluctuated depending upon which company was
perceived to be the more likely to acquire
Paramount.
9 Where actual self-interest is present
and affects a majority of the directors
approving a transaction, a court will apply
even more exacting scrutiny to determine
whether the transaction is entirely fair to
the stockholders. E.g., Weinberger v. UOP,
Inc., Del.Supr., 457 A.2d 701, 710-11
(1983); Nixon v. Blackwell, Del.Supr., 626
A.2d 1366, 1376 (1993).
10 For purposes of our December 9 Order
and this Opinion, we have used the terms
"sale of control" and "change of control"
interchangeably without intending any
doctrinal distinction.
11 See Schnell v. Chris-Craft Indus.,
Inc., Del.Supr., 285 A.2d 437, 439 (1971)
(holding that actions taken by management to
manipulate corporate machinery "for the
purpose of obstructing the legitimate
efforts of dissident stockholders in the
exercise of their rights to undertake a
proxy contest against management" were
"contrary to established principles of
corporate democracy" and therefore invalid);
Giuricich v. Emtrol Corp., Del.Supr., 449
A.2d 232, 239 (1982) (holding that "careful
judicial scrutiny will be given a situation
in which the right to vote for the election
of successor directors has been effectively
frustrated"); Centaur Partners, IV v. Nat'l
Intergroup, Del.Supr.,
582 A.2d 923 (1990)
(holding that supermajority voting
provisions must be clear and unambiguous
because they have the effect of
disenfranchising the majority); Stroud v.
Grace, Del.Supr., 606 A.2d 75, 84 (1992)
(directors' duty of disclosure is premised
on the importance of stockholders being
fully informed when voting on a specific
matter); Blasius Indus., Inc. v. Atlas
Corp., Del.Ch., 564 A.2d 651, 659 n. 2
(1988) ("Delaware courts have long exercised
a most sensitive and protective regard for
the free and effective exercise of voting
rights.").
12 Examples of such protective provisions
are supermajority voting provisions,
majority of the minority requirements, etc.
Although we express no opinion on what
effect the inclusion of any such stockholder
protective devices would have had in this
case, we note that this Court has upheld,
under different circumstances, the
reasonableness of a standstill agreement
which limited a 49.9 percent stockholder to
40 percent board representation. Ivanhoe,
535 A.2d at 1343.
13 We express no opinion on any scenario
except the actual facts before the Court,
and our precise holding herein. Unsolicited
tender offers in other contexts may be
governed by different precedent. For
example, where a potential sale of control
by a corporation is not the consequence of a
board's action, this Court has recognized
the prerogative of a board of directors to
resist a third party's unsolicited
acquisition proposal or offer. See Pogostin,
480 A.2d at 627; Time-Warner, 571 A.2d at
1152; Bershad v. Curtiss-Wright Corp.,
Del.Supr., 535 A.2d 840, 845 (1987);
Macmillan, 559 A.2d at 1285 n. 35. The
decision of a board to resist such an
acquisition, like all decisions of a
properly-functioning board, must be
informed, Unocal, 493 A.2d at 954-55, and
the circumstances of each particular case
will determine the steps that a board must
take to inform itself, and what other
action, if any, is required as a matter of
fiduciary duty.
14 When assessing the value of non-cash
consideration, a board should focus on its
value as of the date it will be received by
the stockholders. Normally, such value will
be determined with the assistance of experts
using generally accepted methods of
valuation. See In re RJR Nabisco, Inc.
Shareholders Litig., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
10389, 1989 WL 7036, Allen, C. (Jan. 31,
1989), reprinted at 14 Del.J.Corp.L. 1132,
1161.
15 Because the Paramount Board acted
unreasonably as to process and result in
this sale of control situation, the business
judgment rule did not become operative.
16 Before this test is invoked, "the
plaintiff must show, and the trial court
must find, that the directors of the target
company treated one or more of the
respective bidders on unequal terms."
Macmillan, 559 A.2d at 1288.
17 It is to be remembered that, in cases
where the traditional business judgment rule
is applicable and the board acted with due
care, in good faith, and in the honest
belief that they are acting in the best
interests of the stockholders (which is not
this case), the Court gives great deference
to the substance of the directors' decision
and will not invalidate the decision, will
not examine its reasonableness, and "will
not substitute our views for those of the
board if the latter's decision can be
'attributed to any rational business
purpose.' " Unocal, 493 A.2d at 949 (quoting
Sinclair Oil Corp. v. Levien, Del.Supr., 280
A.2d 717, 720 (1971)). See Aronson, 473 A.2d
at 812.
18 Both the Viacom and the QVC tender
offers were for 51 percent cash and a
"back-end" of various securities, the value
of each of which depended on the fluctuating
value of Viacom and QVC stock at any given
time. Thus, both tender offers were
two-tiered, front-end loaded, and coercive.
Such coercive offers are inherently
problematic and should be expected to
receive particularly careful analysis by a
target board. See Unocal, 493 A.2d at 956.
19 The Vice Chancellor so characterized
the Stock Option Agreement. Court of
Chancery Opinion, 635 A.2d 1245, 1272. We
express no opinion whether a stock option
agreement of essentially this magnitude, but
with a reasonable "cap" and without the Note
and Put Features, would be valid or invalid
under other circumstances. See Hecco
Ventures v. Sea-Land Corp., Del.Ch., C.A.
No. 8486, 1986 WL 5840, Jacobs, V.C. (May
19, 1986) (21.7 percent stock option); In re
Vitalink Communications Corp. Shareholders
Litig., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 12085, Chandler,
V.C. (May 16, 1990) (19.9 percent stock
option).
20 We express no opinion whether certain
aspects of the No-Shop Provision here could
be valid in another context. Whether or not
it could validly have operated here at an
early stage solely to prevent Paramount from
actively "shopping" the company, it could
not prevent the Paramount directors from
carrying out their fiduciary duties in
considering unsolicited bids or in
negotiating for the best value reasonably
available to the stockholders. Macmillan,
559 A.2d at 1287. As we said in Barkan:
"Where a board has no reasonable basis upon
which to judge the adequacy of a
contemplated transaction, a no-shop
restriction gives rise to the inference that
the board seeks to forestall competing
bids." 567 A.2d at 1288. See also Revlon,
506 A.2d at 184 (holding that "[t]he no-shop
provision, like the lock-up option, while
not per se illegal, is impermissible under
the Unocal standards when a board's primary
duty becomes that of an auctioneer
responsible for selling the company to the
highest bidder").
21 The Paramount defendants argue that
the Court of Chancery erred by assuming that
the Rights Agreement was "pulled" at the
November 15 meeting of the Paramount Board.
The problem with this argument is that,
under the Amended Merger Agreement and the
resolutions of the Paramount Board related
thereto, Viacom would be exempted from the
Rights Agreement in the absence of further
action of the Paramount Board and no further
meeting had been scheduled or even
contemplated prior to the closing of the
Viacom tender offer. This failure to
schedule and hold a meeting shortly before
the closing date in order to make a final
decision, based on all of the information
and circumstances then existing, whether to
exempt Viacom from the Rights Agreement was
inconsistent with the Paramount Board's
responsibilities and does not provide a
basis to challenge the Court of Chancery's
decision.
22 Presumably this argument would have
included the Termination Fee had the Vice
Chancellor invalidated that provision or if
appellees had cross-appealed from the Vice
Chancellor's refusal to invalidate that
provision.
23 We raise this matter sua sponte as
part of our exclusive supervisory
responsibility to regulate and enforce
appropriate conduct of lawyers appearing in
Delaware proceedings. See In re
Infotechnology, Inc. Shareholder Litig.,
Del.Supr., 582 A.2d 215 (1990);
In re Nenno, Del.Supr., 472 A.2d 815, 819
(1983);
In re Green, Del.Supr., 464 A.2d 881, 885
(1983);
Delaware Optometric Corp. v. Sherwood, 36
Del.Ch. 223, 128 A.2d 812 (1957);
Darling Apartment Co. v. Springer, 25
Del.Ch. 420, 22 A.2d 397 (1941).
Normally our supervision relates to the
conduct of members of the Delaware Bar and
those admitted pro hac vice. Our
responsibility for supervision is not
confined to lawyers who are members of the
Delaware Bar and those admitted pro hac
vice, however. See In re Metviner,
Del.Supr., Misc. No. 256, 1989 WL 226135,
Christie, C.J. (July 7, 1989 and Aug. 22,
1989) (ORDERS). Our concern, and our duty to
insist on appropriate conduct in any
Delaware proceeding, including out-of-state
depositions taken in Delaware litigation,
extends to all lawyers, litigants,
witnesses, and others.
24 Justice Sandra Day O'Connor recently
highlighted the national concern about the
deterioration in civility in a speech
delivered on December 14, 1993, to an
American Bar Association group on "Civil
Justice Improvements."
I believe that the justice system cannot
function effectively when the professionals
charged with administering it cannot even be
polite to one another. Stress and
frustration drive down productivity and make
the process more time-consuming and
expensive. Many of the best people get
driven away from the field. The profession
and the system itself lose esteem in the
public's eyes.
....
... In my view, incivility disserves the
client because it wastes time and
energy--time that is billed to the client at
hundreds of dollars an hour, and energy that
is better spent working on the case than
working over the opponent.
The Honorable Sandra Day O'Connor, "Civil
Justice System Improvements," ABA at 5 (Dec.
14, 1993) (footnotes omitted).
25 The docket entries in the Court of
Chancery show a November 2, 1993, "Notice of
Deposition of Paramount Board" (Dkt 65).
Presumably, this included Mr. Liedtke, a
director of Paramount. Under Ch. Ct. R.
|