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Page 1134
663 A.2d 1134
20 Del. J. Corp. L. 277 CINERAMA, INC., a New York
corporation, Plaintiff,
v.
TECHNICOLOR, INC., a Delaware corporation,
Morton Kamerman,
Arthur N. Ryan, Fred R. Sullivan, Guy M.
Bjorkman, George
Lewis, Richard M. Blanco, Jonathan T. Isham,
Macandrews &
Forbes Group, Incorporated, a Delaware
corporation, Macanfor
Corporation, a Delaware corporation, and
Ronald O. Perelman,
Defendants. Civ. A. No. 8358. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Date Submitted: June 28, 1994.
Date Decided: Oct. 6, 1994.
Date Revised: Oct. 12, 1994.
Page 1135
Robert K. Payson, and Arthur L.
Dent, Potter Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington
(Gary J. Greenberg, New York City, of
counsel), for plaintiff.
Rodman Ward, Jr., Thomas J.
Allingham, II, John G. Day, and R. Michael
Lindsey, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, Wilmington, Stephen E. Herrmann,
Richards, Layton & Finger, Wilmington, for
defendants.
OPINION
ALLEN, Chancellor.
This action against the corporate
directors of Technicolor, Inc.
("Technicolor") and others arises from the
negotiation and effectuation of a two step
transaction through which a subsidiary of
MacAndrews and Forbes Group, Inc. ("MAF"), a
Delaware corporation, acquired all of the
stock of Technicolor for $23 per share cash.
As found in the earlier, lengthy trial of
this case, the cash price paid in that
transaction represented more than a one
hundred percent premium over the prior,
unaffected market price of Technicolor stock
on the New York Stock Exchange. No member of
the Technicolor
Page 1136 board was a stockholder, officer or director
of any affiliate of MAF, nor was any
officer, director or stockholder of MAF a
stockholder of Technicolor prior to
initiation of the plan of acquisition.
Following trial this court concluded that
the transaction was negotiated at
arm's-length and in a good faith effort to
achieve the best financial result for the
company's stockholders.
Plaintiff, Cinerama, Inc., was
the holder of 4.4% of Technicolor's issued
and outstanding stock at the times relevant
to this litigation.
1
Cinerama did not tender its Technicolor
stock in MAF's first stage tender offer but
was cashed out in the second step merger.
The core assertions of the suit
are that the board of directors of
Technicolor breached duties of care and
loyalty owed to the stockholders of the
company in the process of negotiating the
first step tender offer and the follow-up
merger and that the remaining
defendants--MAF and Ronald O. Perelman its
controlling stockholder--participated in the
alleged violation of duty, and breached
duties of fairness and candor in the second
stage merger of Technicolor.
This case is one of two cases
arising from the acquisition brought by the
same plaintiff. The other, an action against
Technicolor itself, seeks a judicial
appraisal of the fair value of Technicolor
stock under Section 262 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law. These two cases
were consolidated for trial. That trial
consumed 47 days and concluded, after
extensive briefing, with an opinion of
October 19, 1990 in the appraisal case, Cede
& Co. and Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor,
Inc., C.A. No. 7129, 1990 WL 161084, 1990
Del.Ch. LEXIS 171 and an opinion of June 21,
1991, 1991 WL 111134 (revised June 24, 1991)
in this personal liability action. See
Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8358, Allen, C., 1991 WL
111134 (June 21, 1991), slip op. In the
personal liability action this court held
that the tender offer/merger transaction had
been negotiated at arm's-length with Mr.
Perelman, and that the Technicolor board of
directors as a single deliberative body was
not subject to any material conflict of
interest, nor was the board dominated by any
individual who was subject to such an
interest. In the absence of facts
constituting a material conflict of
interest, it was, thus, held that the
business judgment form of judicial review
was applicable in passing upon Cinerama's
claim that Technicolor directors breached a
duty to the company's shareholders in
authorizing the MAF two step acquisition
transaction.
In its June 21, 1991 Opinion this
court assumed without deciding that the
Technicolor board of directors had indeed
not become adequately informed concerning
the value of the company in a "sale" context
before it authorized the MAF transaction. I
assumed director negligence because, given
the development of the law in the years
following this acquisition, it was a
plausible assumption on the evidence and I
had concluded in all events that even if the
directors had been negligent in this
arm's-length negotiation that the whole
record supplied insufficient information to
support a conclusion that the stockholders
had been financially injured by that fact.
This conclusion permitted one, I thought, to
avoid addressing the advice of counsel
defense that the directors tendered and,
more obviously, to forego a detailed
analysis of the "negligence" question
itself.
In holding that lack of
persuasive evidence of "injury" mooted the
negligence question, my opinion was based
upon what I had understood to be a
recognized principle of corporation law:
that in order to recover a judgment against
a corporate director for a loss caused by
negligence unaccompanied by conflicting
interest, a shareholder bears the burden to
show that such negligent breach of duty by a
corporate director was the proximate cause
of injury suffered by the corporation or the
shareholders as the case may be. That
principle is reflected, for example, in
Section 4.01(d) and Section 7.18 of the
American Law Institute's Principles of
Corporate Governance (1994)
2
and Learned Hand's
Page 1137 opinion in,
Barnes v. Andrews, 298 F. 614 (S.D.N.Y.1924).
Given the large premium over
market price of the Technicolor common stock
achieved in this merger, the record of
premiums in comparable transactions during
the period and the absence of what I
regarded as credible evidence that the
Company was worth more than $23 a share to
any other buyer (including management), I
concluded that the record contained
insufficient evidence to support a
conclusion that any financial injury to
plaintiff had resulted from the assumed
negligence of the Technicolor directors in
negotiating the sale of this company in
1982. Judgment was, thus, entered in favor
of the director defendants.
On appeal the Supreme Court, in a
lengthy and complex decision, reversed
several aspects of this court's opinion. See
Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., Del Supr.
634 A.2d 345 (1993). First, based on this
court's pro arguendo assumption of director
negligence, the Supreme Court made a
judicial finding that the director
defendants had breached their duty to be
reasonably informed. Second, having so
concluded, the Supreme Court then clarified
the operation of the business judgment rule
in Delaware. Specifically the Court
demonstrated the effect/operation of its
prior characterization of the "business
judgment rule" as a "presumption". It held
the principle of Barnes v. Andrews to be
inapplicable to a claim of breach of
fiduciary duty, and held that under the
Delaware version of the "business judgment
rule" if a shareholder establishes director
negligence, thus, overcoming the
presumption, he or she has established a
prima facie case of liability. Upon such a
limited showing, even in an arm's-length
transaction, the Court confirmed that the
burden shifts to the director defendants to
show that the transaction was "entirely
fair" to the shareholders or the
corporation; if the directors fail to meet
that burden, then, arguably, the panoply of
equitable remedies available under the
entire or intrinsic fairness
standard--including where appropriate,
rescissory damages--may be impressed upon
the defendants. See 634 A.2d at 371.
That this Delaware version of the
meaning and operation of the "business
judgment rule" makes that rule a liability
enhancing rule (i.e., it disadvantages
director defendants when compared to other
classes of persons charged with negligently
causing injury to another) was not the
subject of comment in the Court's opinion.
The case has now been returned to
this court and I am required to answer a
series of questions: First, this court has
been directed to reconsider several
questions relating to the conclusion that
the board of directors of Technicolor was
not in a conflict of interest posture with
respect to this transaction. The answers to
these questions may be relevant not only to
the analysis of loyalty issues but also to
the scope of any equitable remedy that may
be found to be appropriate. Second, I must
now determine if the directors of
Technicolor have met a duty of entire
fairness in authorizing the MAF acquisition.
Third, if it is determined that the
directors did not meet that burden, the
court then must determine what remedy in
equity is available to this shareholder.
3
Page 1138
Neither party has asked for the
opportunity to present additional evidence.
The record in this court therefore continues
to be the large trial record earlier
created.
I.
In summary, the positions of the
parties on this remand are simple. For
plaintiff the Supreme Court opinion has left
very little that needs to be decided by this
court. It asserts that the Supreme Court has
already found that the Technicolor board was
insufficiently informed; that, to put a
sharp point on it, they were negligent (or
as our cases express it, grossly negligent)
in not "inform[ing] themselves fully and in
a deliberate manner before voting as a board
upon a transaction as significant as a
proposed merger ..." 634 A.2d at 368. Given
that appellate determination, Cinerama
asserts that this court cannot find that the
sale process was entirely fair to the
Technicolor shareholders.
Thus plaintiff contends the chief
issue on remand is the remedy to which it is
entitled. On this issue too it offers an
elegant argument. It claims to be entitled
to rescissory damages; that is the financial
equivalent of restoring it to its position
as a Technicolor stockholder. Cinerama
simplifies the determination of what that
standard would yield by referring to the
record evidence concerning the sale by MAF
in 1988 of all of its Technicolor stock to
Carlton Communications, PLC. In this sale
MAF realized a very substantial profit on
its investment in Technicolor. The 1982-83
price received by Technicolor shareholders
was approximately $125 million. The 1988
sale to Carlton was for approximately $750
million. Cinerama contends that rescissory
damages in this case would entitle it to
4.4% of this amount, or approximately $162
per share.
For defendants the case is more
complicated. They insist that while the
Supreme Court appears to have found director
negligence, it did so only in the context of
deciding that the burden shifted to the
directors to establish the entire fairness
of the transaction. It did not decide, so
the defendants assert, that the process was
fatally flawed by that fact. If it had, they
say, there would have been no reason to
remand the case to this court for a
determination of entire fairness. Thus
defendants assert that this court is now
free to and indeed required to determine
whether the process and price were such, in
all the circumstances, to assure that the
deal was completely fair to the public
shareholders. Defendants contend that such
review leads to the determination that they
were fair in all respects.
Assuming that the court were to
disagree on that, defendants say that,
nevertheless, rescissory damages could never
in good conscience be awarded against the
defendant directors on the facts of this
case because (1) they received no property
in the merger from which an obligation to
make restitution could arise, (2) they have
been found guilty of lack of care, not of
any intentional wrong, self dealing, or
ultra vires act and (3) in all events, the
growth in the value of the Technicolor
shares over the intervening years between
the merger and the Carlton sale was due in
major part to the management decisions made
by Ronald Perelman and the persons
associated with him in the management of
MAF. Thus defendants contend that
restitution or rescission are simply grossly
inappropriate concepts for a case of this
sort.
* * *
Part II of this opinion addresses
the central issue on remand: whether the
defendants have shown by a preponderance of
the admissible credible evidence that the
MAF acquisition transaction was fair or
entirely fair to the Technicolor
shareholders. For the reasons set forth I
conclude that despite the fact that the
board was inadequately informed when it
accepted this 1982 proposal, in considering
the entirety of the evidence, including that
relating to the course of negotiations, the
various agreements, the process of board
consideration and approval, the price
achieved, and the evidence of Technicolor's
Page 1139 value in a sale context, the MAF transaction
was fair to the Technicolor shareholders.
Some of the analysis of fairness
takes into consideration that this
transaction was not one that involved a
board dominated by a majority with a
financial interest in the transaction in
conflict with the corporation's shareholders
nor dominated or manipulated by a person
with such an interest. In fact, I concluded
after trial that the Technicolor board had
only one member with a material financial
interest in the transaction adverse to
shareholders
4 and
that the predominant majority of the board
was, in approving the MAF proposal,
motivated in good faith to achieve a
transaction that was the best available
transaction for the benefit of the
Technicolor shareholders. With respect to
this "loyalty" issue the Supreme Court has
directed this court to address certain
questions that it has found may be relevant.
This I do in Part IV below.
In Part V, after reconsidering
certain aspects of whether the transaction
under review was approved by a board that
was disinterested and independent in light
of the Supreme Court's comments (at 634 A.2d
at 362-66) I find that neither the board nor
its deliberations were dominated or
manipulated by a person with a material
conflicting interest or otherwise lacked
independence.
In Parts III and IV of this
opinion I address, in the alternative, the
question whether rescissory damages would be
appropriate in this case were one to
conclude that the process followed in this
sale was such as to support the conclusion
that the transaction was unfair to the
shareholders. In light of my determination
that the MAF merger was entirely fair to the
Technicolor shareholders, I recognize that
resolution of this additional question is
not necessary to the resolution of this
action. I address this question, however,
(1) in order to provide plaintiff with
assurance that even if one were to conclude
that the directors have failed to
demonstrate the entire fairness of the
transaction, plaintiff would still not have
recovered money damages given the evidence
in this case, and (2) because the Supreme
Court suggests that the availability of
rescissory damages be addressed on remand.
In Part III I state my opinion that
rescissory damages will generally be
unavailable to remedy a breach of care
unaccompanied by a material conflict of
interest. With respect to the alternative,
"out-of-pocket" or "date of breach" measure
of damages, my evaluation of the record
continues to lead me to the conclusion that
the most persuasive reading of the evidence
is that the deal achieved represented a full
price and that its consummation represented
no financial injury to the Technicolor
shareholders. Therefore in Part IV I
conclude that neither rescissory damages nor
"out-of-pocket" damages would be appropriate
in this case.
II. Fairness of the Process and of the
Transaction
I turn first to the principal
question on remand, whether the transaction
by which the stock interest of Cinerama was
converted to the right to receive $23 per
share cash was entirely fair to the
Technicolor stockholders. I do so on the
premise--further explored in Part V
below--that the MAF acquisition transaction
was negotiated and approved by a board that
was acting in the good faith pursuit of
shareholder interests, and that such
transaction was an arm's-length transaction
in which the board as a whole had no
material conflicting interest.
In connection with a
determination of the entire fairness of this
arm's-length transaction, I recall that we
have been instructed
Page 1140 that fairness may have two components: price
and process. Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 457 A.2d 701, 711 (1983). The
judgment whether a transaction satisfies the
fairness test is, however, not a bifurcated
one but is a single judgment that considers
each of these aspects. Kahn v. Lynch,
Del.Supr.,
638 A.2d 1110 (1994). In some
contexts price may be a relatively minor or
an inapplicable consideration see, e.g.,
Nixon v. Blackwell, Del.Supr. 626 A.2d 1366,
1376 (1993) (finding that only the fairness
of the process was important where the
adoption of an ESOP was challenged by
non-employee shareholders as providing
increased liquidity solely for the ESOP
holders). In other contexts price may
predominate as a salient consideration.
Plainly in a cash-out merger, price is a
dominant concern, most especially where the
buyer already has voting control of the
enterprise, such as a parent-sub merger. In
such a setting given the rejection by our
Supreme Court of the short-lived business
purpose requirement for cash-out mergers,
5 price is the
only substantial issue other than
disclosure.
6 But
in a cash-out merger that is the second step
of an arm's-length transaction, the presumed
reliance by the shareholders on the
integrity of the process by which the price
recommended by the board was arrived at,
makes the fairness and adequacy of the
process a more significant factor in
assessing overall fairness than in the
parent-sub merger context.
Thus in assessing overall
fairness (or entire fairness) in this
instance the court must consider the process
itself that the board followed, the quality
of the result it achieved and the quality of
the disclosures made to the shareholders to
allow them to exercise such choice as the
circumstances could provide. Even though the
test of fairness is a demanding one, it does
not demand perfection. Nixon, 626 A.2d at
1377, 1381. This judgment concerning
"fairness" will inevitably constitute a
judicial judgment that in some respects is
reflective of subjective reactions to the
facts of a case. "Fairness" simply is not a
term with an objective referent or clear
single meaning. This does not mean its
meaning is endlessly elastic and that it
therefore constitutes no standard, but that
it is a standard which in one set of
circumstances or another reasonable minds
might apply differently. I state this
obvious fact because candor requires me to
state that quite basically I cannot conclude
that the transaction attacked was unfair to
Cinerama, or other Technicolor shareholders,
at all.
I, of course, desire to accord
complete respect to the Supreme Court's
conclusion that the director defendants were
negligent and insufficiently informed when
they resolved to accept the MAF proposal.
And I recognize the force of the claim that
a process that is uninformed can never be
fair to shareholders. Yet recognizing that a
single judgment concerning all factors is
called for I find myself unable to conclude
that the MAF tender offer/merger was not a
completely fair transaction. In large
measure this judgment reflects my conclusion
that (1) CEO Kamerman consistently sought
the highest price that Perelman would pay;
(2) Kamerman was better informed about the
strengths and weaknesses of Technicolor as a
business than anyone else; he was an active
and experienced CEO who had designed and
implemented a cost reduction program that
was very beneficial and knew the businesses
in which Technicolor operated; (3) Kamerman
and later the board were advised by firms
who were among the best in the country; (4)
the negotiations lead to a price that was
very high when compared to the prior market
price of the stock (about a 100% premium
over unaffected market price) or when
compared to premiums paid in more or less
comparable transactions during the period;
(5) while the company was not shopped there
is no indication in the record that more
money was possible from Mr. Perelman or
likely from anyone else; management declined
to do an MBO transaction at a higher price
and while I did conclude that the deal was
"probably locked up", if the value of the
company
Page 1141 at that time was or appeared to be remotely
close to the value Cinerama claimed at
trial, any "lock-up" arrangement present
would not have created an insuperable
financial or legal obstacle to an
alternative buyer. Indeed the conclusion
that the transaction was probably locked up
was logically and actually premised upon the
belief that the $23 price was high.
Looking at the fairness of the
process from the point of view of the
directors rather than shareholders also
reinforces my conclusion that the
transaction considered as a whole was
entirely fair to the shareholders. (This
perspective asks what is it fair for a
stockholder to expect of a corporate
director.) The directors relied heavily upon
the CEO and perhaps one of the clearest
messages repeatedly affirmed by the Delaware
Supreme Court's corporate law jurisprudence
from 1985 forward is that outside directors
may not blindly rely upon a strong CEO
without risk.
7
But while in retrospect the defendants
reliance upon Mr. Kamerman may be seen as
too great, they also relied upon reports by
Goldman Sachs and by Debevoise & Plimpton.
Indeed, as set forth below in my opinion
they relied upon the advice of their special
counsel and that reliance is itself a
relevant factor in assessing overall
fairness. The directors were acting, and
their advisors were guiding them, according
to the duties known to them in 1982. In
judging the fairness of this process to
shareholders as well as to directors I do
consider this a relevant but not dominant
consideration.
Nor can I, in making an overall
judgment of fairness to shareholders, put
out of my mind the firm conclusion that I
have reached that a large majority of the
board of directors had no material interest
in this transaction that conflicted with the
shareholders interest.
8
Mr. Sullivan the only director with a found,
material conflict fully disclosed that
interest to the disinterested members of the
board and the contract was thereafter
approved by them.
Cinerama takes the view that once
a court finds itself applying the entire
fairness form of judicial review, it is
irrelevant whether the directors were
disinterested and acted in good faith
pursuit of corporate or shareholder
interests. I cannot agree. While in this
case the effect of the "business judgment
rule" has been held to have been exhausted
and its presumption no longer of any
consequence, the law of fiduciary duties of
corporate directors is older and more basic
than the modernly popular "business judgment
rule."
9 The
overall judgment of fairness to shareholders
that the court must make can, and in my
opinion should, take into account the good
faith of the directors when it considers the
"process" element of the evaluation.
Beyond good faith the directors
were placed in a position at the October 29
board meeting in which highly competent,
indeed, expert legal counsel advised them
that they could exercise a good faith
business judgment. The testimony of that
attorney is clear and I accepted his honesty
as a witness completely:
Page 1142
[U]ltimately the question of what's in
the best interests of the shareholders is a
business judgment question for them as
directors. I said that based on what I had
heard--didn't mean I knew everything in the
world, didn't mean I was a director or
business person. But based on what I had
heard, I thought that they could reasonably
conclude, if they wanted to do it, to sign
up with MacAndrews and Forbes at $23 a
share, for this company that stock had been
trading at nine a month or two ago, without
first saying, "[w]e are up for sale," and
running an auction. They weren't compelled
to. It was business judgment for the
directors to make as directors. (footnote
omitted)
I find the Technicolor board's
reliance upon experienced counsel to
evidence good faith and the overall fairness
of the process. Indeed, it is arguable that
the board's good faith reliance on this
legal testimony may provide an independent
basis for finding the directors not liable
for approving the sale to MAF. 8 Del.C. §
141(e), as amended in 1987, states that:
[a] member of the board of directors ...
shall, in the performance of his duties, be
fully protected in relying in good faith
upon the records of the corporation and such
information, opinions, reports or statements
presented to the corporation by any of the
corporation's officers or employees, or
committees of the board of directors, or by
any other person as to matters the member
reasonably believes are within such other
person's professional or expert competence
and who has been selected with reasonable
care by or on behalf of the corporation.
See 66 Del.L.Chap. 136, § 3
(1987) (emphasis added).
10
The directors of Technicolor
argue that this 1987 statute applies here
and absolves them from liability. This
argument is premised on the assertion that
the legislature intended the amended
language to have a retroactive effect.
Defendants note that the official commentary
to the amendment indicates that the Delaware
Legislature did not consider the new
language as changing the existing law:
Subsection (e) has been amended to
clarify that directors may rely in good
faith upon all corporate records, reports of
employees and committees of the board and
the written or oral advice or opinions of
any professionals and experts who are
selected with reasonable care and are
reasonably believed to be acting within the
scope of their expertise.
S.B. 93, 134th General Assembly
14, 66 Del.L.Chap. 136 (1987) (official
commentary) (emphasis added).
11
Based on this commentary, it is
arguable that the legislature did not amend
the language of § 141(e) to create a new
defense for directors, but sought to ensure
that directors would receive that degree of
liability protection that was intended to be
supplied by § 141(e) as originally enacted.
I need not express an opinion on
this assertion as I conclude that in all
events plaintiffs are not entitled to an
award of damages on this record. I do,
however, believe that reasonable reliance
upon expert counsel is a pertinent factor in
evaluating whether corporate directors have
met a standard of fairness in their dealings
with respect to corporate powers.
Turning from process to price, I
have summarized the reasons why I find that
the price received by the Technicolor
shareholders was a fair one. Numerous
reliable sources indicate that the $23 per
share received constituted the highest value
reasonably available to the Technicolor
shareholders.
Page 1143
At trial the court was presented
with the results of two studies comparing
the premium received in this sale with
premiums received in comparable deals during
the relevant period. The results provide
significant evidence that the Technicolor
shareholders were fully compensated for
their relinquishment of control. The Alcar
Comparable Deal Analysis demonstrated that
among the 61 deals identified by the
target's comparable size to Technicolor, the
109% "one-month deal premium" paid by MAF
ranked fourth highest and was more than
double the 51% average premium of these
comparable deals. Furthermore, within
Technicolor's industry MAF paid the highest
premium amongst all acquisitions from
1981-84 and the premium was four times the
average premium (26.55%) of the other six
deals occurring within the industry during
those years.
Additional facts strongly suggest
that the $23 per share received would not
have been exceeded had the Technicolor
directors properly fulfilled their duties.
For example, after considering engaging in
an LBO, Technicolor's senior management
declined to pursue the LBO and instead they
sold their Technicolor shares to MAF. This
fact that major shareholders, including
Kamerman and Bjorkman who had the greatest
insight into the value of the company, sold
their stock to MAF at the same price paid to
the remaining shareholders also powerfully
implies that the price received was fair.
See Schlossberg v. First Artists Production
Co., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 6670, 1986 WL 15143
Berger, V.C., slip op. at 18-19 (Dec. 17,
1986); Yanow v. Scientific Leasing, Inc.,
Del.Ch., C.A. Nos. 9536, 9561, 1988 WL 8772
slip op. at 13, Jacobs, V.C. (Feb. 5, 1988,
revised Feb. 8, 1988) (holding that the
largest stockholder's acceptance of an offer
constitutes "prima facie evidence that the
offering price is fair"). I have stressed
that the Technicolor/MAF negotiations
occurred at arm's length which fact is
itself somewhat supportive of the conclusion
that the price achieved by the Technicolor
directors satisfies the test of fairness.
Kahn v. Lynch Communication Sys., 638 A.2d
1110, 1115 (1994).
Finally, experts in the
marketplace explicitly and implicitly
indicated that the $23 per share price was
fair and even the best price available. The
Technicolor board's financial advisor,
Goldman Sachs, opined that the price was
fair after performing a number of different
analyses, all of which are acceptable
valuation bases. Goldman did conclude that a
marginally higher price might be arranged
for an MBO but even if one assumes that to
be the case and infers from that that some
buyer other than Perelman or management
might have been able to pay such a price,
such an inference would be supportive of the
conclusion that $23 per share was an
entirely fair price. The components of value
in an acquisition might be considered to be
two: the going concern value of the firm as
currently organized and managed and the
"synergistic value" to be created by the
changes that the bidder contemplates (e.g.,
new management, cost efficiencies, etc.).
This second component will vary to some
extent among bidders. It is the expectation
of such synergies that allows a rational
bidder to pay a premium when he negotiates
an acquisition. Of course, no bidder will
rationally pay more than a 100% of the
expected synergy value to a seller, but in a
competitive market of many buyers he may be
driven to pay a substantial part of the
expected synergy value in order to get the
deal.
Here even if a few dollars more
might have been financially rational to a
buyer, the $23 price achieved reflected a
more than "fair" allocation of synergy value
to the sellers. If for example a $25 price
might have been feasible (to MAF or someone
else), that would mean that a $23 price
represented 86% of the value in excess of
the market price ($11) that a buyer foresaw
he could achieve. A fair price does not mean
the highest price financeable or the highest
price that fiduciary could afford to pay. At
least in the non-self-dealing context, it
means a price that is one that a reasonable
seller, under all of the circumstances,
would regard as within a range of fair
value; one that such a seller could
reasonably accept. This price was certainly
fair in that sense and given the entirety of
the record I conclude that it was the
highest value reasonably achievable.
Paramount Communications, Inc. v. QVC
Network, Inc., Del.Supr.
637 A.2d 34 (1993).
See also p. 1150 below.
Page 1144
It is also worth noting that
plaintiff provided meager evidence
supporting a finding that $23 per share
constituted an unfair price. Plaintiff
suggested that the court must find that
solely due to the directors' negligence the
price and process could not be fair.
Plaintiff's only other basis for such a
finding was the testimony of plaintiff's
expert, Mr. Torkelsen, whose methodology
this court found to be "troub[ling]" and
whose results were found to be "too
strikingly odd to be accepted." Cede & Co.
and Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
C.A. No. 7129, 1990 Del.Ch. LEXIS 171, 34,
52-53, 1990 WL 161084.
* * *
Thus while I conclude that the
process followed by the board in authorizing
the corporation to enter into the MAF
transaction was flawed in that, as found by
the Supreme Court, the board was
insufficiently informed to make a judgment
worthy of presumptive deference,
nevertheless considering the whole course of
events, including the process that was
followed, the price that was achieved and
the honest motivation of the board to
achieve the most financially beneficial
transaction available, I conclude that the
defendants have introduced sufficient
evidence to support a conclusion that, and I
do conclude that, the merger in which
plaintiff was cashed out, as well as the
tender offer in which MAF acquired the stock
interest that enabled MAF to cash out
plaintiff were fair transactions in all
respects to Cinerama.
III. Rescissory Damages in General
In order to assist the efficient
adjudication of this case, I set forth here
my opinion with respect to the claim for
rescissory damages. This question only
arises if the foregoing determination of
fairness of the transaction were to be found
to be reversible error. In that event, the
expression of my considered judgment on the
question of remedy at this time might allow
the Supreme Court to address that question
and thus save the time of a further
proceeding on remand.
Plaintiffs assert that the
Supreme Court has already determined that
rescissory damages are to be assessed in
this case. This is I think a mistaken view.
The Supreme Court has not sought to cabin
the shaping of appropriate equitable relief
by announcing a rule or a ruling to the
effect that if this transaction were found
not to have been entirely fair then
rescissory damages would be required.
Indeed for the reasons that
follow I am required to state the opinion
that rescissory damages should never be
awarded against a corporate director as a
remedy for breach of his duty of care alone;
that remedy may be appropriate where a
breach of the directors duty of loyalty has
been found, see Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 714
(holding that rescissory damages may be
awarded if the lower court on remand finds
them "susceptible of proof and a remedy
appropriate to all the issues of fairness
where the directors were on both sides of
the transaction and did not deal fairly with
the minority shareholders"); Lynch v.
Vickers Energy Corp., Del.Supr.,
429 A.2d 497 (1981) (holding that rescissory damages
should be awarded where a majority
shareholder did not disclose material facts
surrounding its tender offer), but neither
principle nor authority supports the
awarding of rescission or a substitute for
it against one who neither participates in
the deal as a principal nor, is a
co-conspirator of a principal or has a
material conflict of interest of another
sort. I need to explain this interpretation
of our law. I start with some general legal
background.
In a mechanical way, rescissory
damages function to put a party in the same
financial position it would have occupied
prior to the initiation of a transaction
which is found to be invalid or voidable.
This remedy is applied when equitable
rescission of a transaction would be
appropriate, but is not feasible. At the
most general level, this remedy is premised
upon the idea that (1) the transaction
whereby the party gave up an asset was
wrongful in some way and (2) the nature of
the wrong perpetrated is such that plaintiff
is entitled to more than his "out-of-pocket"
harm, as measured by the market value of the
asset at or around the time of the wrong. A
review of the case law shows two prevailing
"strains" of the remedy of rescissory
damages. The first grows out of, and is
closely connected to, restitutionary relief.
The second theory (and the more prominent
Page 1145 one) employs a liberal application of the
compensatory theory of damages against
trustees who commit egregious breaches of
the express terms of a trust or who
self-deal.
(1) Rescissory Damages as a form
of Restitution
This incarnation of rescissory
damages has surfaced in securities law; in
particular in actions under Section 10(b) of
the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934. The
general rule is that a defrauded seller of
securities will be entitled to her
out-of-pocket damages, measured by the value
of the security at a time period reasonably
close to the point at which the seller
received notice of the fraud. The seller
will also be entitled, however, to
additional damages if the stock appreciated
after the sale and the buyer profited as a
result. While the core of this latter remedy
is clearly restitutionary, at least one
prominent decision has referred to this
theory of relief as a manifestation of the
rescissory damages concept.
Myzel v. Fields,
386 F.2d 718 (8th Cir.1967),
cert. denied, 390 U.S. 951, 88 S.Ct. 1043,
19 L.Ed.2d 1143 (1968).
More pertinent to this Court's
present analysis is the Delaware Supreme
Court's decision in Lynch v. Vickers Energy
Corp., Del.Supr.,
429 A.2d 497 (1981),
overruled in part, Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701
(1983). In that action, plaintiffs were
minority shareholders who sued the corporate
majority shareholder and its directors for
breach of candor in connection with a tender
offer. Following a Supreme Court
determination that the defendants had
breached a duty of candor, this court held
that recovery would be limited to
plaintiff's "out-of-pocket" damages. This
remedy would be measured by the fair value
of the stock at the time of the tender
offer. The Court of Chancery applied the
analysis then utilized in a statutory
appraisal to determine the remedial amount.
The Supreme Court reversed this
decision. The Court held that while an
"out-of-pocket" damages approach would have
been appropriate in an action alleging fraud
or misrepresentation, this was not proper in
a claim for breach of fiduciary duty by a
controlling shareholder. Specifically, the
court concluded that in such an action,
plaintiffs should be entitled, as a matter
of law, to damages measured by the fair
value of the stock at the time of judgment,
i.e., rescissory damages.
12
In analyzing Lynch and Weinberger
it is critical to keep in mind that both of
these cases involved controlling
shareholders proposing or effecting
self-interested deals. In all events, the
Supreme Court's Lynch opinion relies upon
restitutionary concepts to justify the award
of rescissory damages:
Here, we focus on the principle which
prohibits a fiduciary from keeping what he
acquired in a transaction preceded by less
than a fair disclosure of facts germane to
the transaction.
Lynch, 429 A.2d at 504. The
principal cases relied upon by the Supreme
Court in this connection themselves relied
upon the restitutionary idea of precluding
unjust enrichment.
13
Notably, in Vickers the court dismissed the
directors of the parent corporation (who did
not personally profit from the tender
offer). That fact is consistent with the
interpretation that restitutionary theory of
rescissory damages explains the Lynch
Page 1146 result.
14 To the
extent that the Lynch reasoning with respect
to rescissory damages remains the law, I
conclude that it focuses upon the "unjust
enrichment" or restitutionary theory. This
theory does not reach corporate directors
who are disinterested and independent but
inadequately informed.
(2) The Compensatory Theory of
Rescissory Damages
The second theoretical basis for
rescissory damages grows out of trust law.
Trustees have been surcharged for the
appreciated value (at the time of judgment)
of property they sold (1) in violation of
their obligations under the trust instrument
or (2) in a transaction in which they
labored under a material conflict of
interest. In both of these situations,
courts have justified this surcharge as an
attempt to render the beneficiary whole for
all of the damages he has suffered as a
result of the breach of trust. See In the
Matter of the Estate of Rothko, 401 N.Y.S.2d
449 (1977);
In re Estate of Anderson, 149 Cal.App.3d
336, 196 Cal.Rptr. 782 (1983) (awarding
appreciation damages against trustee who was
grossly negligent and who had breached its
duty of loyalty by, inter alia, failing to
give adequate notice to beneficiaries of
important transactions). Indeed, in the
cases where a trustee is surcharged (for the
appreciated value of property) because he
failed to follow the dictates of the trust
instrument, the remedy is purely
compensatory (not restitutionary) since the
trustee is not even accused of advancing his
self-interest via the transaction.
As explained more fully below,
trustees are not held liable for
appreciation damages when they are only
guilty of negligence. Only if a trustee had
an affirmative duty not to sell the asset or
sold the asset to benefit her own
self-interest will she be required to return
a trust beneficiary to the position she
would have been in but for the sale.
15 Where a trustee is
authorized to sell trust property and merely
sells it for less than a prudent seller
would get:
he is liable for the value of the
property at the time of the sale less the
amount which he received. If the breach of
trust consists only in selling it for too
little, he is not chargeable with the amount
of any subsequent increase in value of the
property [as he would be] ... if he were not
authorized to sell the property.
Restatement (Second) of Trusts §
205 cmt. d (1959) (emphasis added). Only in
instances of self-dealing or breach of an
affirmative term of the trust is it deemed
equitable to impose upon the trustee the
risk of future fluctuations in the market
value of the asset.
16
Page 1147
In an opinion which foreshadows
some of the concerns of a court adjudicating
a personal liability action against
corporate directors, the New York Court of
Appeals explained why a similarly broad view
of compensatory damages would not be
afforded a beneficiary for the mere
negligence of a trustee:
The reason for allowing appreciation
damages, where there is a duty to retain,
and only date of sale damages, where there
is authorization to sell, is policy
oriented. If a trustee authorized to sell
were subjected to a greater measure of
damages he might be reluctant to sell (in
which event he might run a risk if
depreciation ensured). On the other hand, if
there is a duty to retain and the trustee
sells, there is no policy reason to protect
the trustee; he has not simply acted
imprudently, he has violated an integral
condition of the trust....
These are not punitive damages in a true
sense; rather they are damages intended to
make the estate whole.... these damages
might be considered by some to be exemplary
in a sense, in that they serve as a warning
to others ... but their true character is
ascertained when viewed in the light of
overriding policy considerations and in the
realization that the sale and consignment
were not merely sales below value but
inherently wrongful transfers which should
allow the owner to be made whole. In the
Matter of the Estate of Rothko, supra at
456. (emphasis added)
* * *
I take it as clear that if
rescissory damages were appropriate here, it
would have to be under the theory of the
trust cases applying a compensatory approach
to this remedy. Plainly, the Technicolor
directors did not, in the traditional sense,
profit at the plaintiff's expense via the
MAF acquisition. Indeed, directors Kamerman
and Bjorkman received the same price for
their stock as did plaintiff. I turn then to
the question whether the directors' conduct
is more closely analogous to the negligent
trustee only liable for "out-of-pocket"
damages, or to the trustee who has committed
a breach of trust sufficient to justify
appreciation, or rescissory damages.
IV. Unavailability of Rescissory Damages
Against Corporate
Directors In This Case
Cases holding directors liable
for a breach of the duty of attention or
care, uncomplicated by self-dealing or
conflict of interest are rare. See, e.g.,
Joseph W. Bishop, Jr., Sitting Ducks and
Decoy Ducks: New Trends in the
Indemnification of Corporate Directors and
Officers, 77 Yale L.J. 1078 (1968). One
authority identifies only ten modern cases
as finding actionable director negligence
without a concurrent breach of loyalty or
conflict of interest. See Dennis J. Block,
Nancy E. Barton & Stephen A. Radin, The
Business Judgment Rule: Fiduciary Duties of
Corporate Directors 72-75 (4th ed. 1993). Of
those cases in which liability has been
imposed upon directors for failure to act on
an informed basis, none has employed a
rescissory damage measure of remedy. Date of
transaction or out-of-pocket damages have
been the sole remedy afforded. E.g.,
Doyle v. Union Insurance Co., 202 Neb. 599,
277 N.W.2d 36, 44-45 (1979);
Sandberg v. Virginia Bankshares, Inc.,
891 F.2d 1112 (4th Cir.1989), rev'd on other
grounds, 501 U.S. 1083, 111 S.Ct. 2749, 115
L.Ed.2d 929 (1991) (holding that the damages
resulting from a lack of proxy disclosure
amounted to the difference between the offer
price and the fair value at the time of the
proxy).
17
Page 1148
The lack of authority actually
imposing rescissory damages on a corporate
director in a negligence case, should not
itself be fatal to plaintiff's claim. It
does require us to move to the level of
principle and policy. That deeper analysis
must begin with trust law, which provides a
fertile, if sometimes risky, analogy for
corporate law.
But before undertaking that
analysis, it is important to note the ways
in which trust law differs from corporate
law. In general, the duties of a trustee to
trust beneficiaries (those of loyalty, good
faith, and due care), while broadly similar
to those of a corporate director to his
corporation, are different in significant
respects. Corporate directors are
responsible for often complex and demanding
decisions relating to the operations of
business institutions. The nature of
business competition insures that these
directors will often be required to take
risks with the assets they manage. Indeed,
an unwillingness to take risks prudently is
inconsistent with the role of a diligent
director. The trustees role is, classically,
quite different. The role of the trustee is
prudently to manage assets placed in trust,
within the parameters set down in the trust
instrument. The classic trusteeship is not
essentially a risk taking enterprise, but a
caretaking one. Hence, while trustees may be
surcharged for negligence, a corporate
director is only considered to have breached
his duty of care in instances of gross
negligence.
The duty of loyalty of a trustee
also developed differently than that of a
corporate director. Traditionally a trustee
could not enter self-dealing transactions,
even if the transaction was in all other
respects, fair. Modernly at least, corporate
directors may negotiate transactions with
respect to which they "stand on both sides"
if the terms of the deal, and the process by
which it was negotiated are entirely fair.
See 8 Del.C. § 144. This reflects a
significant difference in the expectations
of the parties to these two relationships. A
trusteeship from its inception has been
imbued with a moral element; it is
considered fundamental that trustees avoid
even the appearance of dishonesty or
disloyalty to maintain the integrity of this
institution. The essence of the
director-shareholder relationship while not
devoid of moral overtones is more firmly
grounded in economics: shareholders expect,
and directors are required to avoid only
those self-interested actions which come at
the expense of the corporate or its
shareholders.
The differing nature of the duty
of loyalty in these relationships is also
reflected in the idea that a trustee's
failure to adhere to the requirements set
down in the trust instrument is itself a
breach of loyalty. A trustee's obligation
flows to both the beneficiary, the person
for whose benefits the assets are held, as
well as the settlor, who often gives
specific instructions which constitute an
essential aspect of the "trust" placed in
the trustee. When a trustee fails to fulfill
the dictates of the trust instrument, he has
failed in his obligation to the settlor to
loyally carry out the settlor's wishes. In
corporation law, by contract, such a concept
is alien. Typically the certificate of
incorporation confers broad minimally
constrained authority upon the board to
engage the corporation in business in all
lawful ways.
These distinctions between trust
law and corporate law, while of tone and
tenor, are important. They do suggest that,
insofar as negligence uncomplicated by a
breach of loyalty is concerned, important
policies having to do with the nature of the
legal institutions of trust and of
corporation require that the corporate
liability rule should certainly remain less
stringent than that of the trust law. To the
extent that corporate directors are exposed
to liability for negligence under a
rescissory damages formula, their ability to
fulfill their basic function as prudent
risk-takers may be hindered. Indeed, the
quoted language of the Rothko court above
(p. 33) has a special pertinence to
corporate law, when one recognizes that the
corporate law has long realized that mergers
are an important form of wealth enhancing
activity. The statutory law in Delaware, as
elsewhere, has
Page 1149 been repeatedly amended over this century to
make the effectuation of mergers easier.
Mergers can facilitate wealth creation; they
are favored for reasons of policy. See
MacFarlane v. North American Cement Corp.,
Del.Ch., 157 A. 396, 398 (1928); Hottenstein
v. York Ice Machinery Corp., D.Del. 45
F.Supp. 436 (1942) aff'd
136 F.2d 944 (3rd
Cir.1943). If disinterested and independent
directors who proceed, upon competent
advice, to authorize a merger are thereby
exposed to market risk of the value of the
company should they later be found to have
been inadequately informed, one might well
expect fewer mergers to eventuate.
* * *
The question is, given the
foreseeable effect of imposing such a
remedy, and the lack of precedent for it,
whether the breach of duty that occurred
here nevertheless justifies it. For the
reasons that follow, I conclude that it does
not.
First, I believe that the
corporation law should in no event be
stricter than the trust law precedent that a
fiduciary guilty of pure negligence should
not be liable for "appreciation" or
rescissory damages.
18
The fact that the directors here have
presumably been found liable for gross
negligence does not affect this conclusion.
Indeed, the higher standard of negligence
for corporate directors reflects a policy
choice that directors need greater latitude
than a traditional trustee, a policy which
would be counteracted by applying rescissory
damages in this context.
Second, I conclude that the
Technicolor directors were not materially
influenced by any interest in the
transaction in a way analogous to the trust
cases where the court found a "breach of
trust" and applied a rescissory damages
remedy. This inquiry is different, although
related to, the evaluation of directorial
self-interest for purposes of rebutting the
business judgment presumption, which was
dealt with at length in the earlier June 21
Opinion. At stake in resolving this latter
issue is purely the degree of scrutiny to
which a board's decisions will be subject.
At stake presently is the scope of the
board's liability. Thus, while the former
issue involves an evaluation of the
circumstances that might plausibly or did
affect the board's decisionmaking, the
latter raises a question of the degree of
actual misconduct by the director vis a vis
the shareholder. Thus, at a minimum
persuasive evidence that the board was
actually motivated by interests other than
those of the shareholders would be
necessary, in my opinion, to support a
rescissory damage award in this context.
While this may arguably be a departure from
the broad view of a trustee's duty of
loyalty taken by some courts, it is in my
opinion consistent with the core idea of
these, and other trust cases.
19
In all events, I find it appropriate to
apply a less severe rule for corporate
directors than might be applied to a
traditional trustee, for the reasons
discussed above.
I conclude that there is no
cogent evidence that the Technicolor Board,
in any material respect, put their interests
ahead of the shareholders negotiating the
sale of the company. While in a classic
self-dealing transaction,
Page 1150 the fact that a director gained a direct and
compelling benefit from the deal would
support a strong inference that
self-interest actually influenced his
behavior, this is not the case in an
arm's-length merger such as this one. Here,
the benefits received by a minority of the
board are much less compelling. I have
already stated my conclusion that with the
exception of Mr. Sullivan, and potentially
Mr. Ryan, none of the other Technicolor
directors labored under a conflict of
interest which would have been material to a
reasonable person. On this remand I further
conclude here that there is no persuasive
evidence that any of the directors were, in
fact, materially influenced in their
negotiations by any self-interest they may
have had. Good evidence of this is the
arm's-length nature of the negotiations
themselves, which commenced at a proposed
deal at $15 per share, and gradually climbed
to the deal price of $23 per share. Also
significant is the powerful evidence that
the price paid by MAF was fair--that the
directors did in fact successfully promote
the interests of the shareholders. Thus,
unlike Rothko, there is here no powerful
empirical evidence to show that the
director's judgment was in fact tainted, as
borne out by an inadequate price.
Finally, while the board's
failure to adequately canvas the market may
arguably be consistent with the idea that
they were committed, out of self-interest,
to the transaction with Perelman, I do not
make this inference. First of all it makes
no economic sense given the stockholdings of
Mr. Kamerman and Bjorkman.
20
Moreover, the board made this decision on
the advice of experienced corporate counsel.
21 They thought
they had negotiated a good transaction for
the shareholders, and did not want to take
steps which might jeopardize it. No improper
motive, insofar as the evidence suggests,
underlay this decision. In my opinion, the
record strongly supports a finding that the
directors were motivated by the best
interests of the shareholders in negotiating
the transaction with MAF.
Under all of the circumstances,
no award of rescissory damages would be
appropriate, in my opinion.
* * *
The only remedy to which the
plaintiff could be entitled is an award of
its out-of-pocket loss caused by the
directors' found breach of duty. In order to
make such an award the court would have to
conclude that there was some creditable
basis in the evidence to find that a price
higher than $23 per share was reasonably
likely to have emerged if the directors had
sought it out. The balance of the evidence
is inconsistent with such a conclusion,
however. On the contrary, there is evidence
(a preponderance) that the price was full
and fair.
In this regard, plaintiff's
reliance on Mr. Torkelson's valuation of the
company to calculate the price the board
would have achieved absent a breach of duty
is misplaced. First, this valuation was
rejected in the appraisal opinion as
distorting the actual value of the going
concern. While the appraisal value is
different than the sale of the firm value,
Mr. Torkelson's testimony is no less flawed
in this setting than in that one. Second,
opinion evidence, unsupported by some
evidence that a bidder would actually have
been interested in paying such a price,
provides a frail, and here inadequate,
support for a damage award. Moreover
plaintiff's expert created estimates that
were so radically at odds with NYSE market
values that even considering the addition of
a control premium, they strain credulity to
well past the snapping point. For the
foregoing reasons, I conclude that
defendants' have satisfied their burden of
showing that their breach of duty resulted
in the Technicolor shareholders receiving no
less consideration for their Technicolor
shares than they would otherwise have.
V.
I now turn to an attempt to
follow the Supreme Court's directions with
respect to the Technicolor board's
independence and
Page 1151 disinterest, summarized at page 366 of its
reported opinion. First I revisit the issue
of what standard should be applied to
determine whether an individual director is
interested in a transaction. Next I address
the test determining whether the board as a
whole has been tainted by the existence of
one or more interested directors. Finally, I
consider the effect, if any, the
Technicolor's charter provision requiring
directorial unanimity has upon the duty of
loyalty. As is clear from what has already
been said, this analysis continues to lead
me to the fundamental fact, which I do find,
that a large majority of the board of
Technicolor was disinterested and
independent with respect to this transaction
and neither of those two directors found or
assumed to be interested dominated or
manipulated the process of board
consideration. See Paramount Communications,
Inc. v. QVC Network, Inc., Del.Supr.,
637 A.2d 34 (1993).
A. Materiality of Claimed Interest
The Supreme Court affirmed that
not every financial interest in a
transaction that is not shared with
shareholders would necessarily be sufficient
to trigger application of the entire
fairness form of judicial review. 634 A.2d
at 363. Thus materiality of any such
interest is a conceptually necessary (but
perhaps practically infrequent) step in an
analysis of whether a board decision is to
be reviewed under the business judgment
format or under an entire fairness
structure. The June 21 Opinion analyzed the
materiality of claims of conflicting
interest of the five of the nine Technicolor
directors who arguably had such an interest.
See June 21 Opinion at 27-36. The standard
applied by this court had been the
"objective," reasonable person standard:
"Material" in this setting refers to a
financial interest that in the circumstances
created a reasonable probability that the
independence of the judgment of a reasonable
person in such circumstances could be
affected to the detriment of the
shareholders generally.
Id. at 36.
With respect to the standard to
judge whether a director's financial
interest is material the Supreme Court
stated that "the Chancellor's use of the
reasonable person standard is unhelpful and,
indeed, confusing. Therefore we reject its
use in resolving whether evidence of
director self-interest is sufficient to
rebut the rule." 634 A.2d at 364. The
Supreme Court did not inform this court of
the proper test to be applied; rather it
remanded the point for further
consideration.
The rejected test for a material
conflicting interest is objective (as
lawyers use that term), referring not to the
effect that a financial interest had or
would have on the particular party, who may
have eccentric characteristics, but to the
effect that one would expect such an
interest to have on a hypothetical
"reasonable person."
Basic v. Levinson, 485 U.S. 224, 231, 108
S.Ct. 978, 983, 99 L.Ed.2d 194 (1988);
TSC Industries Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426
U.S. 438, 449-52, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132-34, 48
L.Ed.2d 757 (1976) (adopting "reasonable
shareholder" test of materiality in federal
disclosure context). One possible
alternative to this "reasonable person" test
would be an "actual person" test of
materiality, focusing on the effect of the
financial interest in fact had on the actual
director in question. Under such a test of
materiality the court would be required to
determine not how or whether a reasonable
person in the same or similar circumstances
of exercising a corporate responsibility
would be affected by a financial interest of
the same sort as present in the case, but
whether this director in fact was or would
likely be affected. If the rejection of
reasonable person standard is to be
confirmed, then I suppose that such a
particularized (or subjective) test would be
the most likely alternative.
Logically, application of a
particularized or subjective test rather
than the more widely used reasonable person
standard to the question of the materiality
of director interest might lead to a
different result than that reached under the
objective test only if the individual
director that is the subject of the analysis
is shown by the evidence to have some
special characteristic that makes him or her
especially susceptible to or immune to
opportunities for self enrichment or if
there is persuasive evidence that he or she
in fact behaved differently in this instance
than one
Page 1152 would expect a reasonable person in the same
or similar circumstances to act. In my
opinion sufficient evidence does not exist
in this record to support such a conclusion
with respect to any of the Technicolor
directors previously found not to have had a
material self interest in this transaction.
The June 21 Opinion set forth the
grounds leading to the conclusion that no
director other than Mr. Sullivan could be
found to have a material conflict of
interest with respect to the MAF
transaction. As to Mr. Ryan I concluded that
there was no persuasive evidence of a
promise or understanding that he would
profit from an MAF takeover. It was apparent
that he and Kamerman had poor relations and
I concluded that "it is unknowable whether
his judgment was affected" by his dislike
for Mr. Kamerman. Applying an objective
test, I assumed for purposes of argument
that he was subject to a material conflict.
(June 21 Opinion at 34). See n. 8 supra. The
evidence with respect to Mr. Kamerman's
various interests (as a substantial
shareholder, as C.E.O. as director, etc.) is
reviewed in this court's earlier opinion and
the conclusion reached that "looking at them
together, I cannot conclude that ... [they]
created any significant incentive for Mr.
Kamerman not shared by other shareholders to
promote sale of the company or sale of the
company to MAF in particular." (June 21
Opinion at 31). There is no evidence in the
record that persuades me that if one asks
the particularized question whether these
various interests in fact interfered with
Mr. Kamerman's seeking to get the best
possible transaction for the Technicolor
shareholders one could reach the opposite
conclusion than that reached under the test
employed in the June 21 Opinion.
I conclude similarly with respect
to each of the corporate directors treated
in this court's opinion; analysis of actual
interference with the directors' good faith
judgment seeking the shareholder's best
benefit does not produce a different result
than does the "reasonable person" analysis.
In candor this is unsurprising.
On the contrary if a judge employing a
reasonable person standard concluded that in
fact a director's judgment was affected by a
factor or interest that would not have
affected a reasonable person, it would be
surprising if he would conclude that
nevertheless there was no material conflict.
The advantage of the reasonable person
standard is that it does not call upon the
court to evaluate the effect of
eccentricities but leaves the question of
materiality as an "objective" matter. But if
the evidence shows that an "objectively"
immaterial conflicting interest in fact did
have a significant impact on the particular
directors in question there is room in the
"independence" prong of the analysis to give
that fact a disqualifying effect insofar as
that director is concerned and one would
expect a trial court to avoid obvious
injustice by doing so. Thus while the June
21 Opinion spoke in terms of a "reasonable
person" and did not express that in fact
these claimed interests did not interfere
with process to achieve stockholder's
welfare, that was my belief.
B.
In its opinion the Supreme Court
stated:
Largely without explanation, the Court of
Chancery concluded that Sullivan's finder's
fee, while materially affecting his own
independent business judgment, was not a
material interest affecting the transaction
overall because the board had approved the
transaction after Sullivan's interest had
been disclosed. Section 144(a) may arguably
sustain this finding. See Fliegler, 361 A.2d
at 222. Unfortunately, neither the court
below nor the parties have brought section
144(a) into their reasoning or analysis.
Cede & Co., 634 A.2d at 365.
The Court then directed this
court that:
Those issues requiring resolution on
remand relating to the duty of loyalty are:
(1) the precise standard of proof required
under the second part of the materiality
standard (see n. 32 supra); (2) the
legitimacy of such a standard under Delaware
law and the relevance of section 144(a); ...
Id. at 366.
In referring to the second part
of the materiality test the Supreme Court
was referring to the view expressed in the
June 21
Page 1153 Opinion that not every material
self-interest of a single director (for
example) would necessarily shift to the
director defendants the burden to prove the
entire fairness of a transaction and expose
them all to equitable remedies if, in
retrospect, the transaction did not appear
to be at a fair price. Again, this Court
assumed that this was standard doctrine. For
example, in the recent QVC case the Supreme
Court noted in passing that:
where actual self-interest is present and
affects a majority of directors approving a
transaction, a court will apply even more
exacting scrutiny to determine whether the
transaction is entirely fair.
Paramount Communications, Inc. v.
QVC Network, Inc., Del.Supr., 637 A.2d 34,
42 n. 9 (1993) (citing Weinberger and Nixon,
626 A.2d at 1376). In all events, this court
concluded that under the circumstances
present in this case Mr. Sullivan's material
self interest in the transaction (or Mr.
Ryan's assumed conflicting interest) did not
itself authorize the shifting and
enhancement of burdens that the Delaware
business judgment rule contemplates.
The Supreme Court has remanded
the case, in part, for further consideration
of what it called the "second step" of the
materiality question. For clarity, I suppose
it may be helpful to limit the term
"materiality" to the question whether a
claimed financial interest of a director is
such as to have actually (under the required
subjective test of materiality) interfered
with the director's exercise of her business
judgment.
22 Once
one or more directors are seen as having a
material interest in the transaction adverse
to the corporation or its shareholders, the
question whether such interest[s] has the
effect of invoking the burdens, and remedies
of the entire fairness test might perhaps be
referred to by another title, such as the
"instrumentality," the "dominance," or the
"significance" issue. By whatever name the
issue is identified, the central inquiry is
the same: Has the presence of the found
material self interest of one or more
directors on the board that acted upon a
transaction so infected or affected the
deliberative process of the board as to
disarm the board of its presumption of
regularity and respect and cast upon the
directors the burden (and the heightened
risks, see June 21 Opinion at p. 25) of the
entire fairness form of judicial review.
In my opinion a financial
interest in a transaction that is material
to one or more directors less than a
majority of those voting is "significant"
for burden shifting purposes (or is
"instrumental" or "material under the second
part of the materiality standard") when the
interested director controls or dominates
the board as a whole or when the interested
director fails to disclose his interest in
the transaction to the board and a
reasonable board member would have regarded
the existence of the material interest as a
significant fact in the evaluation of the
proposed transaction. In such circumstances
the interested director cannot plausibly
claim that the appropriate board processes
upon which investors are required to place
their trust, functioned and thus he cannot
plausibly claim the benefits of the normal
presumptions. Such a director would be
required to prove the entire fairness of the
transaction and face the risks of equitable
remedies should he fail to do so. In my
opinion, in such a circumstance, the
non-interested directors who are merely
subject to the domination of the
controlling, interested director or who are
innocent victims of the non-disclosure of an
interest that is both material to an
interested director and significant to the
board's decision would also be required to
show the entire fairness of the transaction
(if the corporation does not or cannot avoid
the contract), but the particularities of
the case (the directors' good faith if
present, for example) would be considered
were the court required to fix a remedy with
respect to such directors.
* * *
The Supreme Court has mandated
that this court consider the applicability
of Section 144 of the General Corporation
Law to the facts as found. As the Court
noted,
Page 1154 the application of that provision was not
argued before this court. That statute does
not deal with the question when will a
financial interest of one or more directors
cast on the board the burdens and risks of
the entire fairness form of judicial review.
Rather it deals with the related problem of
the conditions under which a corporate
contract can be rendered "un-voidable"
solely by reason of a director interest.
These two problems--when will a director
interest replace business judgment form of
review with entire fairness form of review
and when are interested contracts not
necessarily voidable--are related in that
both focus upon the effect of action by an
"independent" corporate decision maker. But
as construed by our Supreme Court recently
compliance with the terms of Section 144
does not restore to the board the
presumption of the business judgment rule;
it simply shifts the burden to plaintiff to
prove unfairness. See Kahn v. Lynch
Communication Systems, Del.Supr.,
638 A.2d 1110 (1994).
The inquiry whether a board is
independent and disinterested, etc. for
purposes of determining whether it qualified
for the business judgment rule presumption
is somewhat similar to this Section 144
analysis but it can't be the same, since the
business judgment form of review analysis
inquiry must admit of the possibility that,
if there is no material interference with
the independence of the board's process,
that business judgment review is possible.
In all events, the policy of
Section 144 is highly consistent with the
approach the June 21 Opinion took; it was
found that the interest of Mr. Sullivan was
disclosed and a majority of the
non-interested directors approved the
transaction in good faith. See 8 Del.C. §
144(a)(1) (1991, 1992 pocket part). As to
the assumed interest of Mr. Ryan, it is
clear under the language of the statute,
that the alleged hope of better employment
opportunities does not constitute the kind
of interest covered by Section 144.
C.
The Supreme Court inserted into
the case what it took to be a "further
significant issue that neither the parties
nor the court below has addressed; that is
the relevance of Technicolor's charter
requirement of director unanimity to the
consequences of a finding of director
self-interest." Cede & Co., 634 A.2d at 365.
The Supreme Court pointed to three issues
that it saw as possibly raised by this
provision:
If unanimity is required, will one
director's self-interest or lack of
independence violate the requirement? Do the
provisions of section 144 override a charter
requirement of unanimity? Does full
disclosure of a director's interest to an
otherwise disinterested board satisfy
Technicolor's unanimity requirement?
Id. at 366 (footnote omitted).
For the reasons set forth below, in my
opinion the answer to the first of these
question is plainly no. The remaining
questions thus need not be addressed.
The Technicolor supermajority
provision required a 95% stockholder vote to
approve a merger with any entity holding 20%
or more of Technicolor's stock on the record
date for the merger vote. (Technicolor
Charter (PX 1) Art. 10(2)) The "unanimity
requirement" to which the Supreme Court
referred is a requirement that only
unanimous board action can amend or repeal
the supermajority requirement. The language
governing repeal of the supermajority
provision reads as follows:
No amendment to the Restated Certificate
of Incorporation of the Corporation shall
amend, alter, change or repeal any of the
provisions of this Article Tenth, unless the
amendment effecting such amendment,
alternation, change or repeal shall receive
the affirmative vote of the holder of at
least ninety-five percent (95%) of the
outstanding shares of capital stock of the
Corporation entitled to vote in elections of
directors, considered for the purposes of
this Article Tenth as one class; provided
that this paragraph 5 shall not apply to,
and such ninety-five percent (95%) vote or
consent shall not be required for, any
amendment, alternation, change or repeal
unanimously recommended to the stockholders
by the Board of Directors of the Corporation
if all of such directors are persons who
would be eligible to serve as
Page 1155
"Continuing Directors" within the meaning of
paragraph (3) of this Article Tenth.
(Id. Art. 10(5)) (emphasis
added). In order for directors to be
qualified to participate in the required
unanimous board action the charter provides
only one criterion that must be met: the
directors must be "persons who would be
eligible to serve as 'Continuing Directors'
within the meaning of paragraph (3) of this
Article Tenth."
Paragraph (3) provides:
The term "Continuing Director" shall mean
a person who was a member of the Board of
Directors of the Corporation elected by the
stockholders prior to the time that [the
merger partner] acquired in excess of ten
percent (10%) of the stock of the
Corporation entitled to vote in the election
of directors, or a person recommended to
succeeded a Continuing Director by a
majority of Continuing Directors then
serving on the Board of Directors.
(Id. Art. 10(3))
In this case the Technicolor
board unanimously voted to amend the
supermajority voting requirement at the same
meeting at which it approved the MAF deal.
Each director comprising the unanimous Board
that recommended repeal of the supermajority
provision met the charter definition of a
"Continuing Director." Each was elected
prior to MAF's acquisition of any
Technicolor stock.
While supermajority voting
provisions are, of course, valid when
properly adopted, they do represent an
intrusion upon what would otherwise be the
statutory norm of majority rule. Centaur
Partners IV v. National Intergroup, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
582 A.2d 923 (1990); Rainbow
Navigation Inc. v. Yonge, Del.Ch., C.A. No.
9432, Allen, C., 1989 WL 40805 (Apr. 24,
1989). As such they should be strictly
construed to afford full effect to their
terms but should not be extended by liberal
interpretation.
Plainly a literal interpretation
of the unanimity requirement shows that it
was satisfied in this instance. No director
voting at the October 1981 meeting had been
elected after MAF "acquired in excess of ten
percent (10%) of the stock of the
Corporation." Provisions in a corporate
charter should receive a literal and
technical interpretation in most instances.
They are customarily drafted by experts who
count on them being respected in a precise
and literal way. The issue to which the
Supreme Court directs our attention--whether
one who meets the technical requirements of
a continuing director should nevertheless be
regarded as a "non-continuing director"
because he has a (disclosed) conflicting
interest in the transaction, is fully
answered I believe by the requirement that,
absent fraud or mutual mistake, courts
respect and enforce the literal language of
the constitutional documents of a
corporation.
23
VI.
For the foregoing reasons I
conclude that the MAF transaction was in all
respects fair to the shareholders of
Technicolor and that as a consequence
neither the directors of the company nor the
acquiring company have any liability to
plaintiff. The case will therefore be
dismissed. Defendants may submit an
appropriate form of order on notice.
1 Cinerama's stock was registered to the
nominee Cede & Co., which is named a nominal
plaintiff.
2 Section 4.01(d) states that:
A person challenging the conduct of a
director or officer under this Section has
the burden of proving a breach of the duty
of care, including ... in a damage action,
the burden of proving that the breach was
the legal cause of damage suffered by the
corporation.
Section 4.01(d) then refers the reader to
§ 7.18 for a more detailed statement of the
legal cause standards. That Section in turn
states among a number of related provisions
that:
(c) A plaintiff bears the burden of
proving causation and the amount of damages
suffered by, or other recovery due to, the
corporation or the shareholders as the
result of the defendant's violation of a
standard of care set forth in Part IV [Duty
of Care and the Business Judgment Rule]....
See also Balotti and Hanks, Rejudging the
Business Judgment Rule, 48 Bus.Law. 1337,
1345 (August 1993) ("Therefore, the
[shareholder] plaintiff has to prove that
which he or she would have to prove in any
civil action alleging gross negligence,
including causation and damages. The
existence of a "presumption" adds little or
nothing to the burden a plaintiff would have
as the party alleging gross negligence.")
Due to my belief at that time that it was
established law that causation and damages
were essential elements of a negligence
claim against directors the June 21 Opinion
did not dilate on this point.
3 The Supreme Court directed this court
to clarify some aspects of its June 21
ruling on disclosure, which was done by a
January 7, 1994 Report to the Supreme Court.
Thereafter (January 19, 1994) the Supreme
Court affirmed that element of the appeal
but on reargument of its January 19 ruling
the Court again directed this court to
consider some aspect of this disclosure
issue once more (see Cede v. Technicolor,
Del.Supr.,
636 A.2d 956 (1994) which is done
infra at n. 23.
4 With respect to another director, Mr.
Ryan the June 1991 Opinion, assumed that his
state of mind may have interfered with his
independence, albeit he had no financial
interest in the transaction of the kind
contemplated by Section 144 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law, and no promise or
inducement had been made to him. This
assumption was made because given my
conclusion that the remaining seven members
of the board did not have a conflicting
interest, it didn't matter to my analysis
whether Ryan had such a state of mind as
plaintiff posited. Moreover as I concluded
on the earlier remand, a reasonable person
evaluating the MAF proposal would not have
found Ryan's state of mind relevant to the
question presented, especially so as it was
disclosed that he did not participate in the
board's acceptance of the MAF proposal. See
Cede v. Technicolor, Del.Supr., 636 A.2d 956
(1994).
5 See Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 715
(overturning Tanzer v. Int'l General
Industries, Inc., Del.Supr.,
379 A.2d 1121
(1977)).
6 Under state law disclosure is a
significant issue even in a cash-out merger
by a dominate shareholder at least in those
cases where shareholders are afforded the
right to dissent from the merger and seek
appraisal.
7 See, e.g., Smith v. Van Gorkom,
Del.Supr.,
488 A.2d 858 (1985); Revlon, Inc.
v. MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173 (1986); Mills
Acquisition Co. v. Macmillan, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
559 A.2d 1261 (1989); Paramount
Communications, Inc. v. QVC Network,
Del.Supr.,
637 A.2d 34 (1994).
8 Plaintiff did not present a persuasive
case for the claim that Mr. Ryan had a
secret arrangement through Mr. Davis of
(then) Gulf and Western that assured him of
a better position if MAF acquired
Technicolor and, after trial, I so found. In
my post trial opinion, however, I was
willing to "assume" that Ryan may have had a
conflicting interest with respect to his
personal hopes and expectations, because as
I analyzed the case it was an irrelevancy.
9 The place of this concept in the
analysis of corporate law is growing at an
impressive rate. If one searches for
"business judgment rule" in all American
databases for each year over the last fifty
years one finds a remarkable pattern.
Without reproducing the results, the point
is made by saying that for the each decade
starting with 1943 the results are as
follows: 16 reported opinions (1943-52); 25
reported opinions (1953-62); 28 opinions
(1963-72); 156 opinions (1973-82); 620
opinions (1983-92). The growth continues. In
the 18 months since the close of 1992 149
opinions were published that invoked this
term.
10 The prior version of Section 141(e)
read in part as follows:
A member of the board of directors of any
corporation organized under this chapter ...
shall, in the performance of his duties, be
fully protected in relying in good faith
upon the books of account or reports made to
the corporation by any of its officers, or
by an independent certified public
accountant, or by an appraiser selected with
reasonable care by the board of directors or
by any such committee, or in relying in good
faith upon records of the corporation.
11 See also 1 R. Franklin Balotti & Jesse
A. Finkelstein, Delaware Law of Corporations
and Business Organizations § 4.7 (1993
Supplement).
12 The Supreme Court's holding in Lynch
was reversed in part by its subsequent
holding in Weinberger, supra. Weinberger
reversed the Supreme Court's requirement
that rescissory damages be afforded to
remedy a valid claim for breach of fiduciary
duty in a cash-out merger by a controlling
shareholder. The Weinberger court ruled: "To
the extent that ... [Lynch] purports to
limit the Chancellor's discretion to a
single remedial formula for monetary damages
in a cash-out merger, it is overruled."
Weinberger, supra at 715. The court held
also that in a cash-out merger, rescissory
damages might be awarded if capable of proof
and appropriate under the circumstances.
13 The Supreme Court relied extensively
on Myzel v. Fields, supra and
Janigan v. Taylor,
344 F.2d 781 (1965).
Both of these cases involved a court
awarding (or permitting the award of)
damages to the extent of a defrauding
buyer's unjust enrichment. The Supreme Court
also relied a great deal on
Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Co. v. Johnson,
263 F.2d 748 (5th Cir.), cert. denied,
361 U.S. 885, 80 S.Ct. 156, 4 L.Ed.2d 120
(1959). In this case, a corporation was sued
by its shareholders for fraudulently
inducing them to sell back their stock at a
price well below their actual value. The
Court of Appeals, in awarding plaintiffs the
value their stock would have obtained in the
subsequent liquidation of the company,
explicitly relied upon a theory of
restitution.
14 Vice Chancellor Chandler also treated
rescissory damages as a restitutionary
remedy in Russell v. Morris, Del.Ch., C.A.
No. 10009, Chandler, V.C., 1990 WL 15618
(Feb. 14, 1990). The facts of that case,
however, do not suggest that any unjust
enrichment had, in fact occurred. The
plaintiff was one of three directors of a
corporation, each of whom controlled one
third of the company's stock. The suit
alleged that the two other directors had
effectuated a sale of substantially all of
the company's assets in contravention to the
requirements of § 271. The court rejected
defendants' motion for partial summary
judgment on plaintiff's request for
rescissory damages. The court found that
rescissory damages might be especially
appropriate, because plaintiff himself was
not responsible for rescission being
impossible. While that case did not actually
fix an award of rescissory damages it does
have the flavor of a breach of loyalty case.
It is analogous to the trust cases, cited
infra, addressing a trustee's breach of an
express limitation in the trust.
15 See, e.g., 3 Scott on Trusts § 208.3
(3d ed. 1967):
While [an] executor who sells trust
property in breach of trust is ordinarily
liable for value of [the] property at time
of sale and not for appreciated value
thereof if his breach is only in selling at
too low a price, appreciation damages are
appropriate if [the] executor was under duty
to retain interest or if breach consisted of
serious conflict of interest.
If the transaction was not
self-interested, therefore, the trustee is
only surcharged for the value of the
property at the time of the suit where he
sold the property without authority to do
so. The only analogous situation in the
corporate universe would be where directors
effect an ultra vires sale. The Technicolor
directors in contrast, undoubtedly had
authority to enter the MAF merger agreement
and recommend the acceptance of the tender
offer.
16 See In re Talbot's Estate, 141
Cal.App.2d 309, 296 P.2d 848 (1956). In that
case, the Court found that the trustee did
not exercise his independent judgment in
selling trust property and instead relied on
an income beneficiaries' belief that certain
stock should be sold, thus breaching his
duty of care. The Court, however, determined
that the proper measure of damages was
"limited to the loss to the corpus, plus
interest." Id. at 859. The Court
specifically refused to impose "liability
for loss of all income and appreciation that
would have resulted had the sale not been
made." Id. The Court held that to require
the trustee to account for appreciation
would wrongfully place the trustee who acted
in good faith in the same position as one
who defrauds or breaches his duty of
loyalty. The "moral turpitude" existing in
such case was absent where only the duty of
care was breached. Id.
17 The remaining cases identified by
Block, Barton and Radin involved direct
losses to the corporation due to negligence,
not loss of appreciation which could have
accrued to the benefit of the shareholders
but for the directors' negligence. In these
cases as well, courts did not calculate
damages to include the appreciated value of
a lost opportunity. See, e.g.,
Hoye v. Meek, 795 F.2d 893 (10th Cir.1986)
(directors liable for the actual losses
incurred due to their negligent investing);
Brane v. Roth,
590 N.E.2d 587
(Ind.Ct.App.1992) (awarding damages
equal to the loss suffered by the
corporation attributable to the directors'
negligent failure to hedge grain futures);
Francis v. United Jersey Bank, 432 A.2d 814
(N.J.1981) (holding a director liable
for corporate funds misappropriated by
corporate officers).
18 ln
Doyle v. Union Insurance Co., 277 N.W.2d 36
(Neb.1979) the Nebraska Supreme Court,
having found directors to have negligently
sold the company's assets for less than
their value at the time of the sale relied
on trust law principles to determine the
measure of damages on this basis, the Court
affirmed the trial court's determination
that the damages equalled "the difference
between the price for which the property was
sold and its fair and reasonable market
value at the time of the sale." Id. at
44-45.
19 In Rothko, supra, the court awarded
rescissory damages against two of three
trustees, who supervised the disposition of
the Rothko Estate. One of the trustees held
liable was a director of the acquiring
corporation, the other had an employment
contract with it. The third trustee, who was
merely negligent, was only held liable for
out-of-pocket damages.
This case, in my opinion, demonstrates
the point that an award of rescissory
damages is predicated upon the idea that a
trustee's self-interest actually polluted
his decision. Not only were the trustees
self-dealing in the classical sense (which
supports a strong inference that their
judgement was corrupted), but the Rothko
estate's paintings were sold at a
dramatically undervalued price. Thus, the
court had evidence that (1) the
circumstances were such that the director's
duty to the beneficiaries were significantly
in conflict with his self-interest and (2)
that the transaction was implemented under
terms consistent with the conclusion that
the director actually pursued his
self-interest in negotiating it.
20 As found earlier the argument that
Kamerman had a dominant interest as an
officer in his contract is utterly
unconvincing and was rejected.
21 See pp. 18-20 supra.
22 Under the rejected "objective" or
reasonable person standard of course the
test would be formulated somewhat
differently.
23 One element of the initial remand of
the case directed this court to clarify the
meaning of a sentence on page 63 of the June
21 Opinion. This court did so in a
submission of January 7, 1994. Thereafter on
January 18 the Court affirmed the "finding
that the defendant directors did not breach
their duty of disclosure ... in failing to
disclose [any] material self-interest [of
Mr. Ryan]. On reargument of that
determination the Court affirmed that
conclusion but again remanded for this court
to further consider the question of the
non-disclosure of Mr. Ryan's [assumed]
conflict of interest in the light of
"Technicolor's Charte |