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Page 1519
664 F.Supp. 1519
The BRITISH PRINTING & COMMUNICATION
CORPORATION plc, Plaintiff,
v.
HARCOURT BRACE JOVANOVICH, INC., First
Boston Corporation, First Boston Securities
Corporation, Theodore M. Black, J. William
Brandner, Ralph D. Caulo, Trammell Crow,
Robert L. Edgell, Paul Gitlin, Marta Casals
Istomin, Walter J. Johnson, Peter
Jovanovich, William Jovanovich, Eugene J.
McCarthy, Peter J. Ryan, Virginia B. Smith,
Jack O. Snyder, and Michael B. Winston,
Defendants. No. 87 Civ. 3766 (JFK). United States District Court, S.D.
New York. July 24, 1987.
Page 1520
Weil, Gotshal & Manges, New York
City (Dennis J. Block, Nancy E. Barton,
Joseph S. Allerhand, H. Adam Prussin, Eric
N. Landau, Myrna S. Levine, Donald E.
McKnight, Jr., of counsel), for plaintiff
The
Page 1521
British Printing & Communication Corp.
plc.
Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver &
Jacobson, New York City (Sheldon Raab,
William McGuinness, Terrence A. Corrigan,
Debra M. Torres, John A. Borek, Sandra
Lipsman, Karen Morris, John Sullivan, Sheila
G. Gruber, of counsel), for defendants
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. and certain
individual defendants.
Sullivan & Cromwell, New York
City (John L. Warden, Gandolfo v. DiBlasi,
Norman Feit, Pressly M. Millen, Daryl A.
Libow, of counsel), for defendants The First
Boston Corp. and First Boston Securities
Corp.
KEENAN, District Judge:
Introduction
Before the Court is a motion for
an order pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 65
enjoining the implementation of a
recapitalization planned by a major
publicly-owned corporation. Finding that the
movant has failed to demonstrate irreparable
injury and either a likelihood of success on
the merits or a balance of hardships tipping
decidedly in favor of the movant, the Court
denies the motion. Having heard testimony at
a hearing over three days, and on the basis
of numerous submissions, the Court makes the
following findings of fact and conclusions
of law:
Findings of Fact
Plaintiff British Printing &
Communication Corporation plc ("BPCC") is a
British corporation with its headquarters in
Oxford, England. Its chairman and chief
executive officer is Robert Maxwell. BPCC is
owned by Pergamon Holding Foundation
("Pergamon"), an entity organized under
Lichtensteinian law. The identity of the
owners of Pergamon, and thus ultimately of
BPCC, is a closely-guarded secret. BPCC is
one of the world's largest publishing
communications and information companies,
earning in 1986 more than 120 million
dollars. It holds the majority of the
outstanding 6 3/8% convertible subordinated
debentures of defendant Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, Inc. ("HBJ"), with a principal
amount of $9,490,000.
HBJ is a New York corporation
with its principal place of business in
Orlando, Florida. It pursues three main
lines of business: publishing, life and
health insurance and theme parks.
Publishing, the original field in which HBJ
began operations in 1919, remains the core
of its business. Within the publishing
field, HBJ concentrates on educational
publishing, from pre-kindergarten through
graduate and professional schools.
Transcript ("Tr.") 266-67. The chairman of
the board of directors of HBJ is William
Jovanovich ("Jovanovich"). He and the
fourteen other members of HBJ's board are
named individually as defendants herein.
HBJ's common stock has been traded publicly
since 1960 and is listed on the New York
Stock Exchange.
The First Boston Corporation
("First Boston") is an investment banking
corporation organized under the laws of
Massachusetts and having its principal place
of business in New York, New York. First
Boston has for several years acted as HBJ's
principal financial advisor and has
participated in two public securities
offerings by that company. Tr. 273-74. First
Boston Securities Corporation ("FBSC") is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of First Boston.
Incorporated under the laws of Delaware,
FBSC has been used by First Boston as a
vehicle for the extension of financing in
major corporate transactions on several
prior occasions.
On Monday, May 18, 1987,
Jovanovich received at HBJ's offices in
Orlando a letter sent via telecopier from
Maxwell, proposing a merger of BPCC with HBJ
in exchange for payment to HBJ shareholders
of $44.00 per share of common stock. The
letter, PX 2, stated that Maxwell and the
other directors of BPCC were prepared to
meet with HBJ "to review all aspects of such
a transaction, including price." It further
stated that BPCC had reason to believe that
financing was available to it for such
transaction. The proposed merger would be
conditioned on HBJ's cancellation of a
public offering then being contemplated. The
letter stated that BPCC had no plans to
change the headquarters or
Page 1522
replace the management of HBJ were a
merger to be consummated.
The Maxwell letter of May 18 had
been preceeded minutes before by a telephone
call placed by Maxwell to Jovanovich's
office. Jovanovich's secretary had informed
Maxwell that Jovanovich was not in. Tr. 269.
Shortly after the letter was sent, BPCC
issued a release to the press, advising that
it had made the proposal to HBJ and
including a copy of the Maxwell letter. DX
F.
Several hours later, Jovanovich
issued a press release in response to the
proposal, describing it as "preposterous as
to intent and value." Jovanovich Deposition
("Dep.") 76-77. Jovanovich based this
opinion on his own estimate of the value of
HBJ, the manner in which the proposal was
made (and publicized) and his opinion of
Maxwell as a businessman. Jovanovich Dep.
67-73. HBJ contacted its senior management
personnel, its outside directors and
representatives of First Boston. A meeting
of the board of directors was scheduled for
May 21, 1987. Jovanovich requested that
First Boston advise the board with respect
to the Maxwell proposal and the alternatives
it might consider. Tr. 112-14. First Boston
had previously studied HBJ and the
publishing business in general for several
years in its investment banking capacity and
was, in its own view, very familiar with the
value of the company. Tr. 445. In connection
with the planned public offering by HBJ,
First Boston had reviewed financial reports
and earning projections for the forthcoming
years. Tr. 274.
Among those contacted in
connection with the Maxwell proposal was J.
William Brandner ("Brandner"), a director of
HBJ who serves as executive vice-president
of the company and as chairman of HBJ
Insurance. Tr. 265. Brandner is also a
member of the "office of the president" of
HBJ, a senior management group. Brandner, a
certified public accountant who had been
chief financial officer of HBJ, believed
that the Maxwell proposal was inadequate as
to price, based in part on his experience in
the potential acquisition by HBJ of several
other publishing houses and in the actual
acquisition by HBJ of CBS Publishing. Tr.
269. He also doubted the sincerity of the
offer because it was immediately made
public, rather than becoming the subject of
private negotiation. Id.
Brandner was then in California,
participating in a public presentation to
potential investors in HBJ's planned
securities offering. Id. 270.
Jovanovich asked Brandner to return to
Orlando, which he did. There, he met with
Jovanovich and others to discuss the
proposal. It was decided that Brandner would
be primarily responsible for the
negotiations with First Boston concerning
its role in responding to the proposal and
its informational needs. Id. at 271.
Brandner was also charged with presenting to
the other members of management the relevant
information and options raised by the
proposal. He and others met with
representatives of First Boston on the
following day, Tuesday the 19th of May, in
Orlando in order to inform First Boston of
the situation and provide it with the
necessary information.
Brandner and John Berardi, the
senior vice president and treasurer of HBJ,
met on Wednesday, May 20, with
representatives of Morgan Guaranty Trust in
New York, New York to seek financing for
possible transactions in response to the
Maxwell proposal. Morgan had served as HBJ's
primary bank for several decades. Over
Wednesday and Thursday, May 21, Brandner and
Berardi spent at least seven hours with
representatives of Morgan in attempt to
secure a line of credit. HBJ had not,
however, made any commitments to Morgan at
that time. Tr. 274-78.
On Thursday morning, prior to
that day's meeting between the HBJ
representatives and those of Morgan, First
Boston first suggested to Brandner and
Berardi the possible implementation of a
"public leveraged buyout," whereby
shareholders would receive a large cash
dividend and still retain ownership in HBJ,
which would then be a highly-leveraged
company. Id. at 278-79. This
suggested alternative was passed on to
Jovanovich and other members
Page 1523
of management by telephone that day.
Id. at 279.
Since Tuesday afternoon, May 19,
First Boston had been working in Orlando to
arrive at an opinion as to the adequacy of
the Maxwell proposal. A formal agreement
retaining First Boston ("the engagement
letter") was signed by Ralph Caulo, a member
of the board, on behalf of HBJ on Thursday,
May 21. Id. at 282. The engagement
letter provided that First Boston would
undertake "a comprehensive study and
analysis of the business, operations,
financial conditions and prospects" of HBJ.
DX G. This analysis was to be based entirely
on information available to the public or
provided by HBJ to First Boston, rather than
upon an independent appraisal of HBJ. Id.
First Boston also agreed to render an
opinion with respect to the adequacy of the
Maxwell proposal ("the adequacy opinion")
and to render, if requested, an opinion
regarding the fairness to HBJ and its
shareholders of whatever consideration might
be paid to them in the event that an
alternative to the Maxwell proposal were to
be implemented. Id.
In exchange for receiving the
foregoing services, HBJ agreed to pay First
Boston $500,000 immediately plus an
additional $500,000 upon the rendering to
the board of HBJ of the adequacy opinion. PX
7. If HBJ were to undertake some form of
recapitalization, First Boston would receive
under the terms of the engagement letter
$7.5 million. If half of HBJ's stock or all
of its assets were to be acquired, First
Boston would be paid a fee equal to 0.4% of
the consideration paid in the transaction by
which the acquisition was made. In the event
that neither a recapitalization nor a change
of control were to occur at HBJ, First
Boston would receive under the engagement
letter a $1 million independence fee. Under
these terms, First Boston would receive $9
million if the adequacy opinion were
rendered and if HBJ were acquired by BPCC at
the $44 per share price, but would receive
only $8.5 million if it rendered the
adequacy opinion and if HBJ did recapitalize
itself.
At 8:00 p.m. on Thursday, May 21,
the Board assembled to consider the Maxwell
proposal and HBJ's possible responses.
Present were all of HBJ's directors but for
Trammell Crow, who was then in the Orient.
Of the directors present, six are officers
of HBJ: Jovanovich, Brandner, Ralph D.
Caulo, Robert L. Edgell, Peter Jovanovich
(the son of William Jovanovich) and Jack O.
Snyder. Five other directors have business
relationships with the company of varying
significance: Marta Casals Istomin, Walter
Johnson and former Senator Eugene J.
McCarthy each receive consulting fees in
exchange for rendering services to HBJ; Paul
Gitlin performs pre-publication review of
manuscripts to be published by the tradebook
division (to protect against libel suits);
and Peter J. Ryan was formerly a partner in
the law firm of Fried, Frank, Harris,
Shriver and Jacobson, HBJ's outside counsel.
The largest payment to a non-management
director of HBJ (other than Trammell Crow)
was $75,000, received by Walter Johnson in
return for his services as an editorial and
marketing consultant for Johnson Reprint
Corporation, a subsidiary of HBJ. PX 38. The
economic significance to Johnson of this
payment is probably negligible in comparison
to the value of his holdings of HBJ stock,
approximately $90 million. Lesser amounts
were paid to the other directors who receive
consulting fees. These amounts are generally
of the same order of magnitude as those
received for being a director of HBJ. Tr.
401-05. The remaining directors present,
Theodore M. Black, Virginia B. Smith, and
Dr. Michael B. Winston, have no business
relationship with HBJ apart from their
directorships.
In addition to the directors,
several others were present at the 8:00 p.m.
meeting on Thursday: Berardi, Charles Harris
of the law firm of Smith MacKinnon, Mathews
& Harris (a firm that has represented HBJ in
corporate matters); Bruce Starling, a senior
vice president of HBJ, and two secretaries,
a Miss McQuillan and a Mrs. de Carlo. Tr.
284-85.
The initial discussion took place
over dinner and concerned the general
background of events beginning with the
Maxwell proposal.
Page 1524
Copies of the Maxwell letter were given
to the directors as well as other materials.
The circumstances of the proposal were
discussed, including Maxwell's immediate
release of his letter to the press. The
directors considered the advisability of
holding the shareholders' meeting scheduled
the following day and having received advice
of counsel, resolved that it be cancelled.
Tr. 285-86.
At this time, representatives of
First Boston were invited into the meeting,
in order to make a presentation concerning
the adequacy of the Maxwell proposal. First
Boston presented a slide show consisting of
various charts reflecting the results of
different valuation analyses they had
performed. The slide show was accompanied by
the distribution of hard copy of the charts
to the directors. Tr. 286-87. First Boston
employed three primary methodologies in
arriving at a valuation of HBJ, which would
then reveal whether the Maxwell proposal was
adequate. These consisted of a comparable
acquisition analysis for the various
segments of HBJ, a comparable company
analysis and a discounted cash flow
analysis. Tr. 287-88, 439. Each analysis
assumed that the business segments of HBJ
would continue as going concerns. Tr. 439.
In its comparable acquisition
analysis, First Boston examined the amounts
paid in recent years for the acquisitions of
companies comparable to the various segments
of HBJ. Tr. 441. The comparable company
analysis performed by First Boston consisted
of a comparison of the aggregate market
value of companies in the lines of business
of the HBJ segments, analyzed in relation to
the net earnings of the company. As part of
this analysis, First Boston also studied the
relationship of revenues and of operating
income to the total market value of those
companies considered comparable to HBJ
segments. Tr. 440-41. First Boston's
discounted cash flow analysis was based on
projections of the future cash flow of the
business segments for the next ten years
discounted to present value. Tr. 440; DX QQ.
In its projections of future operating
income, First Boston used more conservative
estimates than did HBJ in making its own
projections. The First Boston figures ranged
from 3 percent to 50 percent lower than
HBJ's projections. Tr. 447-49. These
projections were arrived at in part from a
"normalization" of present financial data, a
process by which gains or losses
attributable to discreet events not likely
to recur are factored out of the
projections. On such event, for example, was
HBJ's acquisition of CBS Publishing. Tr.
449-51.
In arriving at the valuations of
individual segments of HBJ, First Boston
took into account the taxes normally
expected to be incurred by those segments.
This primarily meant income taxes. The taxes
accounted for did not, however, include any
capital gains tax to which the sale of the
segments would be subject. This was a
reflection of the fundamental assumption
that the segments were to be valued as going
concerns of which the value to HBJ would be
realized through income rather than through
a sale of the segments. Tr. 452; Jovanovich
Dep. 259. First Boston did perform a
"break-up valuation" in order to predict
what price an acquirer might be willing to
pay for the stock of HBJ in order to then
sell off HBJ's assets. This method of
valuation was employed in assessing the
adequacy of the Maxwell proposal and did
take into account capital gains taxes on the
hypothetical sale of the assets of HBJ upon
acquisition. The break-up valuation was not
used in First Boston's subsequent valuation
opinion used by the board to determine HBJ's
surplus. Tr. 453-54.
By aggregating the valuation
figures for each segment of HBJ and
comparing the results of the three
methodologies employed, First Boston arrived
at a range of figures that it believed best
reflected the value of HBJ. Comparing this
range of values to the total represented by
the Maxwell proposal, First Boston concluded
that the Maxwell proposal was inadequate,
and so advised the board of HBJ. Tr. 287,
298; Winston Dep. 78-79. The board did not,
however, decide then to reject the Maxwell
proposal. Tr. 305.
At this point, representatives of
First Boston outlined for the directors the
recapitalization
Page 1525
that it had previously suggested to
management. Tr. 298; PX 10; Jovanovich Dep.
127. The basic elements described were a
payment of a special dividend to the
shareholders of HBJ consisting of cash and
additional securities, increased ownership
of HBJ stock by the employee stock ownership
plan ("ESOP") and financing for these
transactions from First Boston and Morgan.
Tr. 298; PX 10. This recapitalization would
allow HBJ to give its shareholders immediate
value while allowing them to retain the
benefit of potential growth of the company.
Smith Dep. 34. With the understanding that a
more definite recapitalization proposal
would be developed over the coming weekend,
the board adjourned until the next morning,
Friday, May 22, 1987. PX 10.
Friday morning's meeting was
short. It had been scheduled to coincide
with the now-cancelled public offering and,
before addressing the Maxwell proposal and
the possible alternatives, the board dealt
with more routine matters concerning, among
other things, the retirement of officers and
bank resolutions. Tr. 307. The board then
reviewed the discussions of the previous
meeting and reached a consensus that the
Maxwell proposal was inadequate with respect
to price and of too little seriousness to
merit further consideration. Smith Dep.
38-39. First Boston's adequacy opinion, PX
9, had not yet been formally distributed to
the board. PX 10.
Alvin Shoemaker, the chairman of
First Boston was next invited to address the
board. Tr. 115, 307, PX 10. Shoemaker
expressed concern that Maxwell might attempt
a "street sweep" immediately after the
up-coming Memorial Day weekend. Tr. 116. In
a street sweep, a potential acquirer
abandons his attempt to acquire a company by
bidding and instead purchases as many shares
as possible on the open market, particularly
from arbitrageurs. Tr. 117, 307-08. This
possibility created a need for expedition in
responding to the Maxwell proposal, as those
who were not confident of the long-term
value of HBJ's stock might be convinced to
sell their shares for a less than adequate
price. Tr. 117. Thus, it would be necessary
to assure the shareholders that they would
receive greater value than that offered by
Maxwell, through a swift response by the
board. Id.; Jovanovich Dep. 239-40.
Shoemaker discussed with the directors their
responsibilities to shareholders in such a
situation, answering questions by former
Senator McCarthy, Virginia Smith, and other
directors. Questions came from both those
holding management positions at HBJ and
those who did not. Tr. 118-120. Finally,
Shoemaker discussed the recapitalization
plan briefly. Tr. 309. The board then
adjourned until Monday evening, May 25. Over
the weekend, members of HBJ's management
worked with representatives of First Boston,
Morgan and legal advisers to prepare a
detailed recapitalization plan and make the
necessary financial arrangements. Tr.
310-12.
On Monday the 25th, Memorial Day,
the board met at approximately 8:00 p.m. PX
10. It was at this meeting that the details
of the proposed recapitalization plan were
presented to the board. Tr. 313; Jovanovich
Dep. 253-54; PX 10.
The plan called for a
distribution of a special dividend to
holders of HBJ common stock, consisting of
$40 in cash and a single share of preferred
stock to be valued at approximately $10.
Shareholders would retain their existing
shares. Tr. 122, 312, 314. These shares
would be referred to as "stub" shares, and
their value would be diminished because of
the cost of making the special dividend. Tr.
122. The total paid to the shareholders
would then be somewhere in the range of $55
to $57, as a result of the recapitalization.
Tr. 125, 312. The retention of the stub
shares would allow shareholders to
participate in the future economic growth of
HBJ after the implementation of the
recapitalization plan.
A second part of the plan, as
described to the directors at the Memorial
Day board meeting, was to be the
contribution of a new issue of convertible
preferred stock to the pre-existing ESOP, PX
10; Jovanovich Dep. 229-30, and an offer to
the ESOP of HBJ common shares repurchased on
the open market. PX 10; Tr. 320, 322-23.
This would provide an incentive for
employees
Page 1526
to work more productively, which would be
essential to the ultimate success of the
recapitalization plan. Tr. 126; Jovanovich
Dep. 229-31; Smith Dep. 105. This was
particularly important because the cost of
the special dividend would require HBJ to
restrict its spending in the near future,
thus impinging on its ability to offer other
financial incentives to its employees. Tr.
126. The trustees of the ESOP, who were
members of HBJ's manangement, had obtained
independent legal and financial advisers to
scrutinize the role of the ESOP in this
aspect of the recapitalization plan. Those
advisers had worked throughout the previous
weekend in order to be able to carry out
that task. Tr. 311. The ESOP plan contained
a "pass-through" provision under which
shares allocated to individual participants'
accounts would be voted by the participants.
The trustees of the ESOP have agreed with
the New York Stock Exchange that they will
vote the unallocated shares for and against
proposals to shareholders in the same
proportion as the allocated shares are
voted. Tr. 352, 371-72.
These elements of the
recapitalization plan were presented to the
directors in an oral presentation
accompanied by a slide show and hard copy of
the materials shown in the slide show. Tr.
313; DX M.
The discussion next focused on
the financing arrangements that would allow
HBJ to accomplish this recapitalization.
Temporary, or "bridge," financing was to be
provided by First Boston (through FBSC),
which was prepared to commit $985 million in
order to provide immediate cash for share
purchases and for the payment of the special
dividend. As a condition of making this
commitment, First Boston required that it be
allowed to purchase sufficient shares of HBJ
stock to give it some voice in the running
of the company. Tr. 147-50. Accordingly, the
plan provided for HBJ to sell to First
Boston 40,000 shares of a new issue of
Exchangeable Redeemable Preferred Stock
("ERPS"), at a total price in excess of $80
million. Tr. 316; DX M. These shares would
carry a total of 8,160,000 votes,
representing a cost of approximately $10 per
vote, an amount equivalent to the expected
price at which HBJ's shares would be trading
"ex dividend," i.e., without the right to
receive the special dividend because
purchased after the record date for payment
of the dividend. There are no agreements or
tacit understandings between HBJ and First
Boston concerning how First Boston will
exercise its votes from these shares.
Jovanovich Dep. 211-12; Tr. 146, 321-22. It
was expected that First Boston would vote
its shares as would any other investor. In
fact, part of the reason First Boston wanted
a share of the equity of HBJ was to allow it
to benefit from the future economic growth
of HBJ, as would other share-holders. Tr.
147.
This bridge financing by First
Boston is expected to be retired through the
sale of high-risk, high-yield, subordinated
securities, known as "junk bonds." PX 10;
Winston Dep. 139; Tr. 374-75. In addition,
permanent financing is to be provided by
Morgan, as the leader of a lending syndicate
which would lend $1.9 billion to HBJ. Tr.
325-26; PX 10. The bank loan must, under the
terms of the loan agreement, be used to
retire existing debt, so that the Morgan
syndicate and First Boston will be the only
remaining creditors of HBJ. Id.
Despite the size of the bank loan, the
bridge financing is necessary because the
retirement of existing debt and the
allocation of working capital out of the
bank loan leaves too little available for
the payment of the special dividend. Tr.
326.
Following the description of the
recapitalization plan in detail and
questions addressed to that by board
members, discussion turned to the likely
effects of the transaction on the future of
HBJ. Management described to the rest of the
directors the restrictions on spending and
cost reductions that would be required in
order to meet interest payments. The
directors each were presented with documents
depicting the cash flow requirements
necessary to make those payments and
detailing the anticipated source and
application of those funds. Tr. 328-29; PX
10; Winston Dep. 154-55. The directors
discussed the possible sale of certain
assets (primarily undeveloped land), the
reduction
Page 1527
of HBJ's work force through attrition,
and the forgoing of planned new projects. PX
10. These steps were compared to the likely
results of an acquisition of HBJ by BPCC,
which was expected to result in the merger
of HBJ's overseas operations with those of
BPCC and a concomitant loss of one-half to
two-thirds of employees' jobs, the
withdrawal of HBJ from the trade publishing
business, and the sale of its elementary and
secondary school publishing business and of
its magazine publishing division. PX 10;
Jovanovich Dep. 272-78; Tr. 330. At the
conclusion of this discussion, the board
adjourned its meeting until the following
morning, Tuesday, May 26. PX 10.
On Tuesday morning, the board
reviewed the discussions of the previous
night, including the cash flow projections
and the cost-reduction measures required by
the proposed recapitalization. PX 10; Smith
Dep. 135-37; Tr. 327-30. The directors
questioned the officers of HBJ extensively
on their ability to meet the requirements of
the recapitalization plan. Tr. 330; Winston
Dep. 160-61; PX 10. Representatives of First
Boston and Morgan again reviewed with the
directors the terms of the financing,
referring them to documents earlier provided
to each director. PX 10; Tr. 328. It was
pointed out that First Boston required the
right to purchase the new issue of HBJ stock
as a condition of its loan to HBJ and that
the loan agreement contained default
provisions and allowed First Boston to call
in the loan if a change in control were to
occur at HBJ. PX 10; Tr. 328; Winston Dep.
134; Smith Dep. 82. This latter provision
was required by First Boston to ensure that
it would not be faced with a lengthy
commitment to new management which might not
be as reliable in running HBJ as First
Boston believed HBJ's present management to
be. Tr. 145-46.
The next item reviewed by the
board was the costs of the proposed
recapitalization, which were agreed to be
high, but comparable to the costs of similar
transactions performed by other companies in
the past. PX 10; Tr. 330-31. Among these
fees were those to be paid to First Boston
in connection with its extension of the
bridge loan and its possible underwriting of
the junk bond issue. First Boston would
receive a $29 million fee for extending the
bridge financing and a 3 percent
underwriting discount upon the issuance of
the junk bonds. Tr. 154. The latter fee
should amount to approximately $35 million,
which amount must be paid to First Boston
even if the bonds are not issued. Tr. 159;
PX 49. The total transactional costs of the
recapitalization, including Morgan's fee of
$46 million for arranging the $1.9 billion
loan, would amount, it was explained to the
board, to approximately $125-130 Million. PX
10; PX 49.
Following additional review of
the proposed recapitalization plan, the
meeting was adjourned until 3:00 p.m. that
afternoon, May 26, 1987.
When the board resumed its
meeting that afternoon, the non-management
directors decided to meet separately to
discuss the issued raised in the previous
meetings, apparently at the suggestion of
Shoe-maker and Jovanovich. Tr. 128, 335;
Winston Dep. 161-64; PX 10. Dr. Winston led
the meeting, during which the non-management
directors formulated additional questions
that they wished to ask management and
others. Smith Dep. 120-22; Winston Dep. 166.
They then questioned separately Harris,
certain members of management and
representatives of First Boston. Winston
Dep. 169-71. Having received answers to
their questions, the non-management
directors then concluded their separate
meeting and invited in the remainder of the
board. The separate meeting had lasted
between 20 and 90 minutes. PX 10; Tr. 335,
408; Smith Dep. 120; Winston Dep. 164. Its
probable true length was 45 minutes to an
hour.
When the management directors
returned, the board reviewed a press release
describing the proposed recapitalization and
revised it at the suggestion of Virginia
Smith. PX 10. The directors then considered
an opinion letter furnished by First Boston
on its valuation of HBJ. DX J. That letter
expressed a valuation of HBJ at the low end
of the range calculated by
Page 1528
First Boston, which was nevertheless
sufficiently high to support the payment of
the special dividend. As well as the First
Boston valuation letter, the directors
received and reviewed copies of a letter
from Arthur Anderson & Co. (the accounting
firm) regarding the liabilities of the
company, DX O; a memorandum from Berardi
concluding that the recapitalization plan
would not render HBJ unable to pay its debts
and other obligations as they became due, DX
P; a memorandum from the officers of HBJ
certifying that the financial projections
employed by First Boston and others in
designing the recapitalization had been
reasonably prepared on the basis of the best
available information, DX Q; and two letters
from Richard Udell (the administrative vice
president and general counsel to HBJ)
concerning the likelihood of HBJ's incurring
liability as the result of various
litigation pending or expected to be brought
against HBJ; DX R. The directors reviewed
each of these documents and discussed them
among themselves and with officers of the
company and counsel. Tr. 337. Jovanovich
indicated that he had spoken to Trammell
Crow about the proposed recapitalization and
that Crow had expressed his support for it.
PX 10.
The board of directors, having
concluded its review of the proposed
recapitalization and the supporting
documents, thereupon voted unanimously to
reject the Maxwell proposal and to approve
the recapitalization. A press release
announcing their decision was approved and
disseminated. Tr. 337-39.
This litigation ensued.
Conclusions of Law
To obtain a preliminary
injunction, the moving party must
demonstrate that it will suffer irreparable
harm absent the granting of such relief and
either a likelihood of success on the
merits, or sufficiently serious questions
going to the merits of the litigation and a
balance of hardships tipping decidedly in
favor of equitable relief.
Norlin Corp. v. Rooney, Pace Inc.,
744 F.2d 255, 260 (2d Cir.1984);
Hanson Trust PLC v. ML SCM Acquisition
Inc., 781 F.2d 264, 272-73 (2d Cir.1986)
("Hanson II"). The preliminary injunction is
"one of the most drastic tools in the
arsenal of judicial remedies [and] must be
used with great care, lest the forces of the
free market, which in the end should
determine the merits of takeover disputes,
[be] nullified."
Hanson Trust PLC v. SCM Corp., 774
F.2d 47, 60 (2d Cir.1985) ("Hanson I").
The Court will consider these factors in
turn.
Irreparable Harm
BPCC contends that it will be
irreparably harmed absent some form of
preliminary relief because the
implementation of the recapitalization plan
by HBJ will prevent any future takeover of
HBJ. This, BPCC contends, effectively
deprives share-holders of the opportunity to
obtain the maximum possible value for their
investment, which they might otherwise
obtain in a contest for control of HBJ. BPCC
premises this contention on the sale of the
preferred stock to First Boston, the
contribution and sale of stock to the ESOP
and the provision in HBJ's loan agreements
with First Boston and Morgan which allow for
the debt to be called in immediately upon a
change of control at HBJ.
These transactions do not,
however, foreclose a successful bid for
control of HBJ. While First Boston may be
favorably disposed to the present management
of HBJ, there is no agreement or implied
understanding which would compel First
Boston to favor them if an attractive offer
were made for First Boston's stock or to
vote against a proposed merger with BPCC or
any other entity. This is also true of the
ESOP. BPCC has offered nothing but
speculation to support its contention that
the ESOP trustees would vote as a block with
management or First Boston on future
transactions. The "pass-through" provision
of the ESOP ensures that all allocated
shares held by the ESOP will be voted by
HBJ's employees, not by management. The
trustees have agreed with the New York Stock
Exchange that they will vote those shares
not yet allocated for and against any
proposal to the shareholders in the same
proportion as the allocated shares are
voted. Thus, the contribution and sale
Page 1529
of stock to the ESOP does not "lock up"
voting control over those shares with the
management of HBJ. Even if that were the
case, moreover, the trustees would be bound
by law to act in the best interests of the
ESOP beneficiaries and to tender its shares
if that were in the beneficiaries' best
interests. See 29 U.S.C. § 1104;
Donovan v. Bierwirth, 680 F.2d 263
(2d Cir.), cert. denied, 459 U.S.
1069, 103 S.Ct. 488, 74 L.Ed.2d 631 (1982).
Nor do the change of control
provisions in HBJ's loan agreements preclude
a take-over of the company. The would-be
acquirer need only obtain sufficient
financing of its own with which to replace
the loans in order to render those
provisions nugatory. Even absent such
alternative financing, the acquirer would
quite possibly be able to assure First
Boston and Morgan that it is capable of
running HBJ as efficiently as does present
management and thereby dissuade them from
calling in the loans.
In sum, none of these aspects of
the recapitalization plan prohibit an
acquisition of HBJ by an entity with
sufficient capital and determination. That
they might discourage less well-equipped
suitors, while providing immediate value to
HBJ's shareholders, does not constitute the
sort of irreparable harm that the Court
ought to protect through injunctive relief.
To do so would interfere with the forces of
the free market on which shareholders depend
to increase their investment.
Nor does the payment of the
special dividend itself create irreparable
harm to BPCC as a shareholder. The debt
incurred in order to provide that dividend
will be offset by the payment of the
dividend (plus cost-reductions implemented
because of the recapitalization). The net
result of the recapitalization is therefore
to neither decrease nor increase the value
of HBJ to its shareholders but to allow them
to realize that value, in part immediately,
more fully than they might otherwise.
The true risk of harm arising
from the declaration of the special dividend
is to the creditors of HBJ, who might be
left without adequate recourse should HBJ
fail to meet its financial obligations. The
only significant creditors remaining after
the recapitalization, however, will be First
Boston and the Morgan syndicate. Because
they favor the recapitalization, the Court
need not enjoin it to protect their
interests. BPCC surely should not be heard
to argue that it understands the true
interests of creditors better than do the
creditors themselves.
Finally, the possibility that HBJ
stock will be delisted from the New York
Stock Exchange because of the Exchange's
networth rules is speculative and
insufficient to warrant the granting of
relief. In contrast, the threat of delisting
Norlin v. Rooney, Pace Inc., 744 F.2d
at 260, was much more concretethe
Exchange had already expressed its intent to
delist the stock there. No such event has
occurred in this case.
Likelihood of Success on the
Merits
As stated above, BPCC must show
that it is likely to succeed on the merits
in order to satisfy the first alternative
ground for granting injunctive relief,
assuming the Court were to agree that it had
demonstrated irreparable harm. The Court
concludes that BPCC has failed to make that
showing.
The parties agree that the
propriety of the action taken by HBJ's
directors must be determined according to
the law of New York, the state in which HBJ
is incorporated. New York law imposes two
principal duties on corporate directors: a
duty of due care in the execution of
directoral responsibilities and a duty of
loyalty to the best interests of the
corporation and its shareholders. Hanson
II, 781 F.2d at 273-74;
Norlin v. Rooney, Pace Inc., 744 F.2d
at 264. Cf. Plato, The
Republic Part Four [Book Three] at 180
(Penguin Classics 2d ed. 1974) ("... we must
look for the Guardians who will stick most
firmly to the principle that they must
always do what they think best for the
community."). In assessing the conduct of
directors under New York law, the Court is
barred by the "business judgment rule" from
second-guessing actions taken by the
directors "in good faith and in the exercise
of honest judgment
Page 1530
in the lawful and legitimate furtherance
of corporate purposes."
Auerbach v. Bennett, 47 N.Y.2d 619,
629, 419 N.Y.S.2d 920, 926, 393 N.E.2d 994,
1000 (1979). This business judgment rule
applies in the contexts of bids for
corporate control as in other contexts and
"affords directors wide latitude in devising
strategies to resist unfriendly advances."
Norlin v. Rooney, Pace Inc., 744 F.2d
at 264; see Hanson II, 781 F.2d
at 273. The latitude afforded directors in
such circumstances is not, of course,
unlimited. Hanson II, 781 F.2d at
273.
The initial burden of proving
that corporate directors have breached a
fiduciary duty rests with the plaintiff.
Id.;
Crouse-Hinds Co. v. Internorth, Inc.,
634 F.2d 690, 701-04 (2d Cir.1980).
Where a plaintiff is able to make a prima
facie showing of self-interest on the part
of the directors, the burden shifts to the
directors to demonstrate that the
transaction is fair and in the best
interests of the corporation and its
shareholders.
Norlin v. Rooney, Pace Inc., 744 F.2d
at 264. The interest of directors in
retaining their positions as directors is
not by itself sufficient to cause the burden
to shift to them.
Crouse-Hinds Co. v. Internorth, Inc.,
634 F.2d at 702. BPCC argues that the
consulting relationships between certain
non-management directors and HBJ renders
them self-interested. These relationships
are not of substantial economic
significance, however, and do not result in
payment to the directors involved
substantially in excess of normal directors'
fees. Because the receipt of directors' fees
is not sufficient to show self-interest by a
board member, see, e.g.,
In re E.F. Hutton Banking Practices
Litigation,
634 F.Supp. 265, 271 (S.D.N.Y.1986), the
Court does not believe that the directors
were truly self-interested in the
recapitalization. (Nor do Walter Johnson's
substantial stock holdings in HBJ provide
him with any interest conflicting with those
of other shareholders.) Nevertheless, the
Court concludes that the better course is to
apply the more stringent rule and examine
the transaction as if the directors were
self-interested, because of the importance
of the recapitalization to HBJ and its
shareholders and because of the preliminary
nature of the fact finding process on this
application for injunctive relief.
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the
burden of demonstrating the fairness of the
transaction to the corporation and its
shareholders must rest with the directors.
The Court believes that no
lengthy analysis is necessary before
concluding that the directors satisfied
their duty of due care in examining the
Maxwell proposal and in responding to it.
The primary requirement of the duty of due
care is that the directors make an informed
decision, having availed themselves of the
advice of experts and using the available
time to consider their options carefully.
See Hanson II, 781 F.2d at 274-77.
The directors met five separate
times over six days to consider the Maxwell
proposal and the alternatives available to
them. They consulted financial advisers who
had been familiar with HBJ from past
association and who engaged in a
near-Herculean effort to provide the board
with advice soundly based on thorough
analysis and to structure the alternative
transaction that appeared best to all
concerned. The board did not rely on
conclusory statements of their advisers, but
reviewed carefully and questioned the
support for the advice they received. Those
advisers had been provided with the best
information then available to HBJ in order
to perform their tasks. The directors
appropriately considered the effects of the
recapitalization on HBJ and its shareholders
and the effects of a failure to act swiftly.
They availed themselves of the time they
reasonably believed they had in which to
act. In sum, it is difficult to see how the
directors could have been more diligent or
better informed under the circumstances.
That the board declined to
approach BPCC for negotiations does not
indicate that the directors did not fully
investigate the relevant facts. It was
reasonable to conclude from the terms of the
Maxwell proposal and the manner in which it
was made and publicized that BPCC did not
intend to negotiate in good faith towards a
purchase of HBJ at a fair price.
Page 1531
That management played an
important role in providing information to
the board's advisers and in working with
them to plan the recapitalization was proper
and detracts in no way from the conclusion
that the directors exercised due care.
Management was to receive no greater
benefits from the recapitalization than
would HBJ's employees and shareholders.
Moreover, it possessed the information and
expertise vital to the development of an
effective response to the Maxwell proposal.
Concluding then that the
directors of HBJ did not breach their duty
of due care, the Court must address the
question of their loyalty to HBJ and its
shareholders, of the fairness of the
recapitalization.
BPCC does not contend that the
shareholders received no value from the
recapitalization, arguing instead that they
received less than otherwise might be
available because the board acted to
entrench the incumbent management rather
than to further the interests of the
shareholders. The evidence adduced by BPCC
is insufficient to support this conclusion.
BPCC urges that the sale of
exchangeable redeemable preferred stock to
First Boston was designed solely to place
votes in friendly hands in order to entrench
management. The record reveals, however,
that it was First Boston that insisted on
the right to purchase the stock as a
condition of providing the bridge financing,
as a way of ensuring that it had a voice in
HBJ's management (so as to protect its loan
to HBJ) and as an investment. BPCC adduced
no evidence of a secret or open agreement
between First Boston and any other entity
concerning how it would vote or dispose of
its shares. In addition, First Boston paid a
price for that stock equivalent to the
market price for the comparable common stock
being traded on the market ex dividend.
Similarly, BPCC's reliance on the
stock transactions involving the HBJ ESOP is
of no avail to it. The evidence was
uncontradicted in showing that the ESOP was
created for a valid purpose long before the
Maxwell proposal. The sale and contribution
of HBJ stock to the ESOP as part of the
recapitalization plan was intended to serve
as an incentive for increased employee
productivity, an essential element of the
plan's success. No credible evidence to the
contrary was adduced. The possibility of an
entrenchment motive underlying this
transaction is belied by the fact that
neither management as a whole nor the ESOP
trustees control how the stock held by the
ESOP is voted. Whether to tender the stock
to a potential acquirer of HBJ would be
decided by the trustees under the
constraints of their legal obligation to act
in the best interests of the ESOP
beneficiaries.
The Court concludes that BPCC has
failed to demonstrate that the
recapitalization plan of HBJ is unfair to
HBJ or its shareholders or that it was
improperly motivated by a desire to entrench
the present management of HBJ.
BPCC's final argument against the
recapitalization is that HBJ does not have
adequate surplus as defined under New York
law to allow it to declare and pay the
special dividend. BPCC's attack on this
aspect of the recapitalization is
two-pronged. New York law permits the
declaration or payment of dividends out of
surplus only. N.Y.Bus.Corp.Law § 510(b).
BPCC urges that the surplus must be based on
the valuation assets reflected on the books
of the corporation. No direct support is
cited for that proposition. The leading case
on revaluing assets for the determination of
surplus makes no mention of the requirement.
Randall v. Bailey, 23 N.Y.S.2d 173
(Sup.Ct.1940), aff'd, 262 App.
Div. 844, 29 N.Y.S.2d 512 (Sup.Ct.1941),
aff'd, 288 N.Y. 280, 43 N.E. 43 (1942).
It thus appears that New York law imposes no
such requirement and that BPCC's attack on
this ground must fail.
The second prong of BPCC's
argument is addressed to the amount at which
HBJ's assets were valued by the board. BPCC
contends that the assets were valued too
aggressively and that future earnings were
wrongly considered in arriving at the
valuation. Randall v. Bailey supports
the use of the "going concern" value of a
business in determining surplus under New
York law. 23 N.Y.S.2d at 177-78;
Hayman v. Morris, 36 N.Y.S.2d 756,
767-68
Page 1532
(Sup.Ct.N.Y.Co.1942);
Morris v. Standard Gas & Electric Co.,
63 A.2d 577 (Del. Ch. 1949) (Delaware
law). In addition, the evidence adduced at
the hearing revealed that the directors had
reasonably relied on expert advice offered
by First Boston and that First Boston had
been conservative in its valuation of HBJ,
reducing the financial forecasts supplied by
HBJ's management and adhering to the lower
end of the calculated range of values. BPCC
has not shown that that valuation was
unreasonably high.
Thus, the Court concludes that
BPCC has not demonstrated a likelihood of
success on the merits.
Balance of Hardships
The balance of hardships tips
decidedly in favor of denying the
preliminary relief requested. As stated
above, BPCC and the other shareholders of
HBJ will suffer no significant injury under
the recapitalization plan. Were the Court to
enjoin its implementation, however, HBJ
would incur substantial interest charges
without receiving the attendant benefits of
recapitalization. First Boston would be
unable to exercise its voice in the affairs
of HBJ as required to protect its
investment. Most important, to grant the
injunctive relief requested would deprive
HBJ's shareholders of the value to which
they are entitled under the plan. Because of
the intricacies of financing, the
opportunity to receive this dividend, once
delayed, may be lost permanently. Moreover,
the expectations of the marketplace upon
which investors have bought and sold HBJ
stock would be defeated. To do so on the
basis of the evidence adduced on this motion
would be unfair to all those investors who
have acted upon their expectations.
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the
motion for a preliminary injunction is
denied.
SO ORDERED. |