| Page 79 669 A.2d 79
64 USLW 2398 Alan R. KAHN, as custodian for
Amanda Kahn and Kimberly
Kahn, Plaintiff Below, Appellant,
v.
LYNCH COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS, INC., Compagnie
Generale
d'Electricite, Alcatel, S.A., Alcatel USA
Corp., Frank M.
Drendel, Raymond Hono, Francois H. de Laage
de Meux, John
Gailey and Gilles DuPay-d'Ageac, Defendants
Below, Appellees. No. 169, 1995. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: Sept. 6, 1995.
Decided: Nov. 22, 1995.
Page 80
Appeal from Court of Chancery.
Affirmed.
Victor F. Battaglia and Robert D.
Goldberg, Biggs and Battaglia, Wilmington,
and Joan T. Harnes (argued), Silverman,
Harnes & Harnes, New York City, for
Appellant.
Allen M. Terrell, Jr. (argued),
and John T. Dorsey, Richards, Layton &
Finger, Wilmington, for Appellees.
Before WALSH, HOLLAND, and
HARTNETT, Justices.
WALSH, Justice:
This is the second appeal in this
shareholder litigation after a Court of
Chancery ruling in favor of the defendants.
The underlying dispute arises from a
cash-out merger of Lynch Communications
System, Inc. ("Lynch") into a subsidiary of
Alcatel USA, Inc. ("Alcatel"). In the
previous appeal, this Court determined that
Alcatel, as a controlling shareholder of
Lynch, dominated the merger negotiations
despite the fact that Lynch's board of
directors has appointed an independent
negotiating committee. Kahn v. Lynch
Communication Systems, Inc., Del.Supr., 638
A.2d 1110, 1112-13 (1994) ("Lynch I "). We
concluded, however, that such a
determination did not necessarily preclude a
finding that the transaction was entirely
fair and remanded the matter to the Court of
Chancery for a determination of entire
fairness, with the burden of proof upon the
defendants.
Upon remand, the Court of
Chancery reevaluated the record under the
appropriate burden of proof and concluded
that the transaction was entirely fair to
the Lynch minority shareholders. The court
also rejected plaintiff's claim that the
defendants violated their duty of disclosure
in failing to describe specifically the
threat of a lower priced tender offer. We
affirm in both respects.
Page 81
I
The facts underlying the
derivative claims are set forth extensively
in Lynch I and we summarize them briefly for
present purposes.
Lynch, a Delaware corporation,
designed and manufactured electronic
telecommunications equipment, primarily for
sale to telephone operating companies.
Alcatel, a holding company, is a subsidiary
of Alcatel (S.A.), a French company involved
in public telecommunications, business
communications, electronics, and optronics.
Alcatel (S.A.), in turn, is a subsidiary of
Compagnie Generale d'Electricite ("CGE"), a
French corporation with operations in
energy, transportation, telecommunications
and business systems.
In 1981, Alcatel
1
acquired 30.6% of Lynch's common stock
pursuant to a stock purchase agreement. As
part of that agreement, Lynch amended its
certificate of incorporation to require an
80% affirmative vote to approve any business
combination. By the time of the events
leading to the contested merger, Alcatel
owned 43.3% of Lynch's outstanding stock and
designated five of the eleven directors on
Lynch's board of directors, two of the three
members of the executive committee, and two
of the four members of the compensation
committee.
In the spring of 1986, Lynch
determined that it needed to acquire fiber
optics technology in order to remain
competitive. Lynch management identified a
target company, Telco Systems, Inc.
("Telco"), that had the needed technology.
Telco was apparently amenable to acquisition
by Lynch. Lynch had to obtain Alcatel's
consent, however, since the supermajority
voting provision gave Alcatel an effective
veto over any business combination.
Exercising this power, Alcatel vetoed the
transaction and instead proposed a
combination of Lynch and Celwave Systems,
Inc. ("Celwave"), an indirect subsidiary of
CGE that possessed fibre optics technology.
Ellsworth F. Dertinger ("Dertinger"),
chairman of the board and CEO of Lynch,
stated that Celwave would not be of interest
to Lynch if Celwave were not owned by
Alcatel. Nevertheless, the Lynch Board
unanimously adopted a resolution that
established a committee of independent
directors (the "Independent Committee") to
negotiate with Celwave and recommend the
terms and conditions on which a combination
would be based.
On October 24, 1986, Alcatel's
investment banking firm, Dillon, Read & Co.,
Inc. ("Dillon, Read") made a presentation to
the Independent Committee in which it
explained the benefits of a Lynch/Celwave
combination and proposed a stock-for-stock
merger. The Independent Committee's
investment advisors reviewed the Dillon,
Read report and placed a significantly lower
value on Celwave than had Dillon, Read.
Consequently, the Independent Committee
decided that the proposal was unattractive
to Lynch and made a recommendation against
the Lynch/Celwave combination.
Reacting to the Independent
Committee's recommendation, Alcatel withdrew
the Celwave proposal and instead offered to
acquire the Lynch shares it did not already
own at $14 cash per share. In response, at
its November 7th board meeting, the Lynch
directors revised the mandate of the
Independent Committee and authorized the
same directors to negotiate the cash merger
offer with Alcatel. Meeting on the same day,
the Independent Committee decided that $14
per share was inadequate.
On November 12, the Independent
Committee made a counteroffer of $17 per
share. The parties negotiated for
approximately two weeks, during which time
Alcatel's highest offer was $15.50 per
share. On November 24, 1986, the Independent
Committee met with its financial and legal
advisors and were informed by one of the
committee members that Alcatel was "ready to
proceed with an unfriendly tender at a lower
price" if the $15.50 offer was not accepted.
The Independent Committee, after consulting
with its financial and legal advisors, voted
unanimously to recommend that the Lynch
board approve Alcatel's $15.50 cash per
share merger. The Lynch board met later that
day and, with Alcatel's nominees abstaining,
approved the merger.
Page 82
Kahn, a Lynch shareholder,
brought suit, later certified as a class
action, challenging Alcatel's acquisition of
Lynch through a tender offer and cash-out
merger. Kahn alleged the merger to be unfair
in that Alcatel, as a controlling
shareholder, breached its fiduciary duties
to Lynch's minority shareholders.
Specifically, Kahn charged that Alcatel
dictated the terms of the merger; made
false, misleading, and inadequate
disclosures; and paid an unfair price.
In its initial ruling, the Court
of Chancery agreed with Kahn in finding that
Alcatel exercised control over Lynch, but
rejected the claim that Alcatel's
disclosures in connection with the merger
were insufficient. Kahn v. Lynch
Communication Systems, Inc., Del.Ch., C.A.
No. 8748, 1993 WL 290193 slip op. at 5, 18,
Berger, V.C. (July 9, 1993) (the "1993
decision"). Since Alcatel had negotiated
with Lynch through an Independent Committee,
however, the court placed the burden of
disproving entire fairness on the plaintiff.
In its evaluation of the evidence, the court
concluded that Kahn had not carried his
burden of demonstrating that the price was
unfair and thus failed to prove a breach of
fiduciary duty on the part of Alcatel.
Judgment was accordingly entered for the
defendants and Kahn appealed.
On appeal, this Court agreed with
the Court of Chancery that Alcatel was a
controlling shareholder. Lynch I, 638 A.2d
at 1114-15. Since Alcatel had vetoed Lynch's
acquisition of Telco and dominated Lynch's
board on other occasions, the Court of
Chancery's finding was clearly supported by
the record. Id.
This Court then turned to the
finding that the transaction was entirely
fair. We noted that normally a controlling
shareholder, such as Alcatel, bears the
burden of proving the entire fairness of a
transaction in the context of a
parent-subsidiary merger. Id. at 1115.
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., Del.Supr., 457 A.2d
701, 710 (1983), requires that the party
that has the burden of showing entire
fairness must address that concept's "two
basic aspects: fair dealing and fair price."
Weinberger also addressed the question of
what type of evidence would constitute a
showing of entire fairness, and indicated
that procedures, such as an independent
negotiating committee which approximated an
arm's length bargaining process is strong
evidence of fairness. 457 A.2d at 109-10 n.
7.
The question remained, however,
of the weight to be accorded such evidence,
or, more specifically, whether a procedure
approximating arm's length bargaining shifts
the burden to the plaintiffs to show entire
fairness or changes the standard of review
so that the transaction will be examined
under the business judgment rule. In Lynch I
we noted that, since Weinberger, a business
purpose has not been required to justify a
merger. 638 A.2d at 1116. Therefore, since
no business judgment need be exercised, the
business judgment rule is not the proper
standard of review. Id. "Consequently, in a
merger between the corporation and its
controlling stockholder--even one negotiated
by disinterested, independent directors--no
court could be certain whether the
transaction terms fully approximate what
truly independent parties would have
achieved in an arm's length negotiation."
Citron v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours & Co.,
Del.Ch., 584 A.2d 490, 502 (1990).
Accordingly, the transaction must be
examined for its entire fairness "because
the unchanging nature of the underlying
'interested' transaction requires careful
scrutiny." 638 A.2d at 1116.
The next issue addressed by this
Court in Lynch I was the allocation of the
burden of proof. In order to shift the
burden of showing entire fairness to the
plaintiffs, the Independent Committee's
negotiations must have resulted in something
approaching arm's length negotiations. When
undertaking this evaluation "[p]articular
consideration must be given to evidence of
whether the special committee was truly
independent, fully informed, and had the
freedom to negotiate at arm's length." Lynch
I, 638 A.2d at 1120-21. We noted with
approval an earlier Court of Chancery ruling
to the effect that at least two factors are
required for this type of negotiation: (1)
"the majority shareholder did not dictate
the terms of the merger," and (2) the
committee had real bargaining power so that
it could negotiate with the controlling
shareholder at arm's length. Rabkin v. Olin
Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 7547
(Consolidated),
Page 83 Chandler, V.C., 1990 WL 47648, slip op. at
14-15 (Apr. 17, 1990), reprinted in 16
Del.J.Corp.L. 851, 861-62 (1991), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
586 A.2d 1202 (1990).
Without explicitly referring to
the Rabkin test, the Court of Chancery in
the 1993 decision found that it had been
satisfied to the extent the Independent
Committee had appropriately simulated an
arm's length transaction. However, in Lynch
I, this Court found that determination to be
unsupported by the record. 638 A.2d at 1121.
Alcatel's threat of a hostile bid prevented
the negotiations from approximating an arm's
length transaction. Id. The Independent
Committee had, in effect, surrendered to the
ultimatum delivered with Alcatel's last
offer. Id. Alcatel's use of its
disproportionate bargaining power destroyed
any approximation to being at arm's length
the negotiations otherwise may have had. We
therefore held that the Court of Chancery
had improperly allocated the burden of proof
to the plaintiff. Id. at 1112.
Consequently, the case was
remanded for a "redetermination of the
entire fairness of the cash-out merger to
Kahn and the other Lynch minority
shareholders with the burden of proof
remaining on Alcatel, the dominant and
interested shareholder." Id. at 1122; see
Cede & Co. v. Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr.,
634 A.2d 345, 367 (1993), on reargument,
636 A.2d 956 (1994) ("Cede II "). Revisiting its
decision based solely on the existing record
and in light of this Court's instructions,
the Court of Chancery preliminarily, and
correctly, noted that "the Supreme Court did
not intend to foreclose a finding of entire
fairness on remand." Kahn v. Lynch
Communication Systems, Inc., Del.Ch., C.A.
No. 8748, 1995 WL 301403, slip. op. at 3,
Berger, J. (April 17, 1995) (the "1995
decision"). "[T]he absence of certain
elements of fair dealing does not mandate a
decision that the transaction was not
entirely fair." Id. at 3-4; accord Cinerama,
Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663
A.2d 1156, 1179 (1995).
After examining the transaction
for entire fairness, the Court of Chancery
once again found for the defendants, holding
that they had carried the burden of showing
the entire fairness of the transaction. See
Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 663 A.2d 1134, 1144 (1994). The
Court of Chancery rejected the plaintiff's
claim that the coercion of the Independent
Committee should have been disclosed to the
shareholders. In addition, despite this
coercion, the defendants were deemed to have
met their burden of fair dealing because
they had satisfied other relevant factors
set forth in Weinberger. Id. at 3-5 (citing
Weinberger, 457 A.2d at 711). Specifically,
the court examined the transaction's timing,
initiation, structure and negotiation.
Next, the Court of Chancery
examined the issue of fair price. Finding
the evaluation of the plaintiffs' expert
flawed, the court concluded that the
defendants had also met their burden of
establishing the fairness of the price
received by the stockholders. 1995 decision
at 5-6. Thus, the Court of Chancery held for
the defendants after finding that they had
established the entire fairness of the
transaction. Accord Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Ch.,
663 A.2d 1134, 1144 (1994).
In this appeal from the 1995
decision of the Court of Chancery, Kahn
raises several issues. First, he contends
that the finding of fair dealing was
inconsistent with our opinion in Lynch I and
unsupported by the record. Specifically,
Kahn asserts that the coercion of the
Independent Committee constituted a per se
breach of fiduciary duty which strongly
compels a finding that the transaction was
not entirely fair. In addition, the
plaintiff charges that the initiation,
timing and negotiation of the merger were
unfair and also require a finding of unfair
dealing.
Second, the plaintiff contends
that Alcatel breached its fiduciary duty to
Lynch's stockholders by not fully disclosing
its conduct in negotiating the merger. Thus,
according to the plaintiff, the Court of
Chancery erred by not finding a breach of
the duty of disclosure. Such a finding, it
is argued, is itself proof of unfair
dealing.
The third claim made by Kahn is a
challenge to the determination that they
received a fair price for their shares. Kahn
insists that the evidence submitted by
Page 84 Alcatel did not sustain their burden of
showing that the price was fair.
II
Although we address this matter a
second time following a partial reversal and
remand, the standard of appellate review of
the Court of Chancery's second decision is
the same. To the extent that the Court of
Chancery made supplemental factual findings,
we will defer to those findings unless they
are clearly erroneous or not arrived at
through a logical process. Cede & Co. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 634 A.2d 345,
360 (1993); Lynch I, 638 A.2d at 1114. Our
review of the formulation and application of
legal principles, however, is plenary and
requires no deference. Gilbert v. El Paso
Co., Del.Supr., 575 A.2d 1131, 1142 (1990).
A.
At the outset we must confront
the disagreement between the parties
concerning the extent to which our decision
in Lynch I limited the scope of the Court of
Chancery's re-examination of the record on
remand. Kahn argues that this Court's
characterization of Alcatel's conduct as
"coercive" was not accorded adequate
consideration by the trial court in its
entire fairness calculation. Alcatel
contends to the contrary that this Court's
evaluation of the record in Lynch I was done
in the context of determining which party
had the burden of proving entire fairness
and that the Court of Chancery, on remand,
was restricted procedurally, but not
substantively, in its view of the trial
evidence.
While we agree that our decision
in Lynch I limited the range of findings
available to the Court of Chancery upon
remand, our previous review of the record
focused upon the threshold question of
burden of proof. Our reversal on burden of
proof left open the question whether the
transaction was entirely fair. Lynch I, 638
A.2d at 1122. Indeed, Kahn concedes that our
ruling on burden shifting did not create per
se liability, an obvious concession since we
did not address the fair price element in
Lynch I, except to note that the Independent
Committee's ability to negotiate price had
been compromised by Alcatel's threat to
proceed with a hostile tender offer. See
Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 663 A.2d 1156, 1162 (1995). The
Court of Chancery correctly took as its
premise on remand that Alcatel, as the
dominant and interested shareholder bore the
burden of demonstrating the entire fairness
of the merger transaction. Its findings will
be tested from that perspective.
As we noted in Lynch I, "a
controlling or dominating shareholder
standing on both sides of a transaction, as
in a parent-subsidiary context, bears the
burden of proving its entire fairness" Id.
at 1115. The standard for demonstrating
entire fairness is the oft-repeated one
announced in Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 457 A.2d 701, 711 (1983): fair
dealing and fair price. Fair dealing
addresses the timing and structure of
negotiations as well as the method of
approval of the transaction, while fair
price relates to all the factors which
affect the value of the stock of the merged
company. Id. at 711. An important teaching
of Weinberger, however, is that the test is
not bifurcated or compartmentalized but one
requiring an examination of all aspects of
the transaction to gain a sense of whether
the deal in its entirety is fair. Id. In its
most recent authoritative analysis of the
subject, this Court held: "the board will
have to demonstrate entire fairness by
presenting evidence of the cumulative manner
by which it ... discharged all of its
fiduciary duties." Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d at
1163.
B.
This Court will now review the
Court of Chancery's entire fairness analysis
upon remand. Accord Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d at
1172. The record reflects that the Court of
Chancery followed this Court's mandate by
applying a unified approach to its entire
fairness examination. Lynch I, 638 A.2d at
1115. In doing so, the Court of Chancery
properly considered "how the board of
directors discharged all of its fiduciary
duties with regard to each aspect of the
non-bifurcated components of entire
fairness: fair dealing and fair price."
Page 85 Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 663 A.2d at 1172.
In addressing the fair dealing
component of the transaction, the Court of
Chancery determined that the initiation and
timing of the transactions were responsive
to Lynch's needs. This conclusion was based
on the fact that Lynch's marketing strategy
was handicapped by the lack of a fiber optic
technology. Alcatel proposed the merger with
Celwave to remedy this competitive weakness
but Lynch management and the non-Alcatel
directors did not believe this combination
would be beneficial to Lynch. Dertinger,
Lynch's CEO, suggested to Alcatel that,
under the circumstances, a cash merger with
Alcatel will be preferable to a Celwave
merger. Thus, the Alcatel offer to acquire
the minority interests in Lynch was viewed
as an alternative to the disfavored Celwave
transaction.
Kahn argues that the Telco
acquisition, which Lynch management strongly
supported, was vetoed by Alcatel to force
Lynch to accept Celwave as a merger partner
or agree to a cash out merger with Alcatel.
The benefits of the Telco transaction,
however, are clearly debatable. Telco was
not profitable and had a limited fiber optic
capability. There is no assurance that
Lynch's shareholders would have benefitted
from the acquisition. More to the point, the
timing of a merger transaction cannot be
viewed solely from the perspective of the
acquired entity. A majority shareholder is
naturally motivated by economic
self-interest in initiating a transaction.
Otherwise, there is no reason to do it.
Thus, mere initiation by the acquirer is not
reprehensible so long as the controlling
shareholder does not gain a financial
advantage at the expense of the minority.
Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 663 A.2d 1156, 1172 (1995);
Jedwab v. MGM Grand Hotels, Inc., Del.Ch.,
509 A.2d 584, 599 (1986).
In support of its claim of
coercion, Kahn contends that Alcatel timed
its merger offer, with a thinly-veiled
threat of using its controlling position to
force the result, to take advantage of the
opportunity to buy Lynch on the cheap. As
will be discussed at greater length in our
fair price analysis, infra, Lynch was
experiencing a difficult and rapidly
changing competitive situation. Its current
financial results reflected that fact.
Although its stock was trading at low
levels, this may simply have been a
reflection of its competitive problems.
Alcatel is not to be faulted for taking
advantage of the objective reality of
Lynch's financial situation. Thus the mere
fact that the transaction was initiated at
Alcatel's discretion, does not dictate a
finding of unfairness in the absence of a
determination that the minority shareholders
of Lynch were harmed by the timing. The
Court of Chancery rejected such a claim and
we agree.
C.
With respect to the negotiations
and structure of the transaction, the Court
of Chancery, while acknowledging that the
Court in Lynch I found the negotiations
coercive, commented that the negotiations
"certainly were no less fair than if there
had been no negotiations at all" 1995
decision at 4. The court noted that a
committee of non-Alcatel directors
negotiated an increase in price from $14 per
share to $15.50. The committee also retained
two investment banking firms who were well
acquainted with Lynch's prospects based on
their work on the Celwave proposal.
Moreover, the committee had the benefit of
outside legal counsel.
It is true that the committee and
the Board agreed to a price which at least
one member of the committee later opined was
not a fair price. Lynch I, 638 A.2d at 1118.
But there is no requirement of unanimity in
such matters either at the Independent
Committee level or by the Board. A finding
of unfair dealing based on lack of unanimity
could discourage the use of special
committees in majority dominated cash-out
mergers. Here Alcatel could have presented a
merger offer directly to the Lynch Board,
which it controlled, and received a quick
approval. Had it done so, of course, it
would have born the burden of demonstrating
entire fairness in the event the transaction
was later questioned. See Weinberger v. UOP,
Del.Supr.,
457 A.2d 701 (1983). Where,
ultimately, it has been required to assume
the same burden, it should fare no worse in
a judicial
Page 86 review of the fairness of its negotiations
with the Independent Committee.
Kahn asserts that the Court of
Chancery did not properly consider our
finding of coercion in Lynch I. Generally,
as in this case, the burden rests on the
party that engaged in coercive conduct to
demonstrate the equity of their actions.
Lynch I, 638 A.2d at 1121; Unitrin, Inc. v.
American General Corp., Del.Supr., 651 A.2d
1361, 1373, 1387 (1995) (holding that burden
rests on board of directors which has taken
draconian, e.g., coercive, measures in
response to hostile tender offer). Kahn
challenges the Court of Chancery's finding
of fair dealing by relying upon the holding
in Ivanhoe Partners v. Newmont Min. Corp.,
Del.Ch., 533 A.2d 585, 605-06 (1987), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1334 (1988), for the
proposition that coercion creates liability
per se.
2 Ivanhoe
makes clear, however, that to be actionable,
the coercive conduct directed at selling
shareholders must be a "material" influence
on the decision to sell. Id.; see also
Eisenberg v. Chicago Milwaukee Corp.,
Del.Ch., 537 A.2d 1051, 1061-62 (1987).
Where other economic forces are
at work and more likely produced the
decision to sell, as the Court of Chancery
determined here, the specter of coercion may
not be deemed material with respect to the
transaction as a whole, and will not prevent
a finding of entire fairness. In this case,
no shareholder was treated differently in
the transaction from any other shareholder
nor subjected to a two-tiered or squeeze-out
treatment. See, e.g., Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., Del.Supr., 493 A.2d 946, 956
(1985). Alcatel offered cash for all the
minority shares and paid cash for all shares
tendered. Clearly there was no coercion
exerted which was material to this aspect of
the transaction, and thus no finding of per
se liability is required.
D.
As previously noted, in Lynch I
this Court did not address the fair price
aspect of the merger transaction since our
remand required a reexamination of fair
dealing at the trial level. The parties had
presented extensive evidence at the original
trial concerning the value of Lynch. Upon
remand the Court of Chancery reassessed that
evidence with the burden on Alcatel to prove
the fairness of the cash-out merger price.
Accord Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 663 A.2d 1134, 1142-44 (1994).
In considering whether Alcatel
had discharged its burden with respect to
fairness of price, the Court of Chancery
placed reliance upon the testimony of
Michael McCarty, a senior officer at Dillon
Read, who prepared Alcatel's proposal to the
Independent Committee. He valued Lynch at
$15.50 to $16.00 per share--a range
determined by using the closing market price
of $11 per share of October 17, 1988 and
adding a merger premium of 41 to 46%. Dillon
Read's valuation had been prepared in
October, 1986 in connection with the
Lynch/Celwave combination proposed at a time
when Lynch was experiencing a downward trend
in earnings and prospects. Subsequent to the
October valuation, Lynch management revised
its three year forecast downward to reflect
disappointing third quarter results.
The Court of Chancery also
considered the valuation reports issued by
both Kidder Peabody and Thompson McKinmon
who were retained by the Independent
Committee at the time of the Celwave
proposal in October. At that time both
bankers valued Lynch at $16.50 to $17.50 per
share. These valuations, however, were made
in response to Alcatel's Celwave proposal
and were not, strictly speaking, fairness
opinions. When Lynch later revised downward
its financial forecasts based on poor third
quarter operating results
Page 87 both firms opined that the Alcatel merger
price was fair as of the later merger date.
Kahn supported his claim of
inadequate price principally through the
expert testimony of Fred Shinagle, an
independent financial analyst, who opined
that the fair value of Lynch on November 24,
1986 was $18.25 per share. He reached that
conclusion by averaging equally the values
he derived from market price, book value,
earning power and capitalization.
Shinagle used the average market
price for Lynch stock during the week of
June 23, 1986 since Lynch and Alcatel first
began discussion about a Celwave transaction
on June 25. That average was $13.23 per
share. He next computed Lynch's book value
of $17.99 per share by applying a multiple
of 1.7 to Lynch's accounting book value of
$10.58 per share. The multiple was derived
from the average book value multiple of six
companies which Shinagle chose for
comparison analysis. The information
concerning the comparable companies was
gathered from Standard & Poor's summary
sheets using the Standard Industrial Code
(SIC) Classification. Shinagle did not
perform a first hand review of the financial
statements of the comparable companies but
relied solely upon the Standard & Poor
material. Nor did Shinagle perform any
independent research on Lynch's production
and industry but relied instead on
information relayed by Dertinger.
Shinagle's capitalization value
for Lynch, $27.92 per share, was secured by
multiplying the book capitalization figure
of $11.17 per share by 2.5. This multiple
was not the average but the highest of the
six comparable companies. He justified the
use of the highest multiple on the ground
that Lynch had a lower debt to equity ratio
than any of the comparables. He believed
that an inverse correlation exists between
debt-to-equity and capitalization
multipliers.
Finally, Shinagle devised a value
for earning power of $13.37 per share again
by calculating average multiples from his
comparable companies for revenue, net income
and cash flow. These multiples applied
against Lynch's forecasted revenue, net
income and cash flow yield results which he
averaged to reach earning power value.
In addition to the testimony of
his valuation expert, Kahn offered the view
of Dertinger, Lynch's CEO at the time of the
merger, who testified that he thought the
fair value of Lynch at the time of the
merger was $20 per share. Dertinger
considered "two values of Lynch: Our
marketing value--that is in the eyes of our
customers--and the value of Lynch on Wall
Street as exemplified primarily by the stock
price. But I think that is definitely
secondary to a company's potential." Board
member Hubert Kertz also testified that in
his opinion Lynch's value was well above the
$14 merger price. Although conceding that
"not being a financial man but being a
manager" he thought that "even under almost
the worst scenario, it ought to be somewhere
in the high teens or $20 a share."
In its fair price analysis, the
Court of Chancery accepted the fairness
opinions tendered by Alcatel and found the
merger price fair. The court rejected Kahn's
attack on the merger price because it found
the Shinagle valuation methodology to be
flawed for the reason set forth in the trial
court's 1993 decision. Those deficiencies
included Shinagle's decision to use the
highest capitalization ratio instead of the
average as he did with his other
calculations involving the comparable
companies. The court noted that had Shinagle
used the average capitalization rate of the
comparable companies, consistent with his
use of averages for his other valuation
approaches, his capitalization value would
have been $13.18 per share instead of the
$27.92 per share produced by applying the
highest capitalization ratio. The court
rejected Shinagle's assumption that
debt/equity ratio correlates to a high
capitalization ratio as unjustified.
In resolving issues of valuation
the Court of Chancery undertakes a mixed
determination of law and fact. When faced
with differing methodologies or opinions the
court is entitled to draw its own
conclusions from the evidence. Kahn v.
Household Acquisition Corp., Del.Supr., 591
A.2d 166, 175 (1991). So long as the court's
ultimate determination of value is based on
the application of recognized valuation
standards, its acceptance
Page 88 of one expert's opinion, to the exclusion of
another, will not be disturbed. Id.
The Court of Chancery's finding
that Alcatel had successfully born the
initial burden of proving the fairness of
the merger price is fully supportable by the
evidence tendered by the experts retained by
Alcatel and by the Independent Committee.
Shinagle's opinions supporting a higher
valuation were rejected as flawed and the
testimony of Dertinger and Kertz not
credited by the trial court because of the
lack of analysis or objective support.
Although the burden of proving fair price
had shifted to Alcatel, once a sufficient
showing of fair value of the company was
presented, the party attacking the merger
was required to come forward with sufficient
credible evidence to persuade the finder of
fact of the merit of a greater figure
proposed. See Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor,
Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d 1156, 1177 (1995);
Citron v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
Del.Ch., 584 A.2d 490, 508 (1990);
Rosenblatt v. Getty Oil Co., Del.Supr., 493
A.2d 929, 942 (1985). The Court of Chancery
was not persuaded that Kahn had presented
evidence of sufficient quality to prove the
inadequacy of the merger price. We find that
ruling to be logically determined and
supported by the evidence and accordingly
affirm.
III
We next address the remaining
question decided by the Court of Chancery in
its 1993 decision but not resolved in Lynch
I--whether Alcatel violated the duty of
disclosure in its Offer to Purchase directed
to Lynch shareholders. Kahn asserts that in
light of this Court's finding that Alcatel
used coercion to gain approval of the merger
price by the Lynch board, the Offer to
Purchase contained material omissions. To
the contrary, Alcatel maintains that in both
the Offer to Purchase and in its Schedule
13D filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Alcatel fully and clearly
indicated that its option included a tender
offer directly to stockholders if
negotiations with the Lynch Board proved
unsuccessful.
A controlling shareholder owes a
duty of complete candor when standing on
both sides of a transaction and must
disclose fully all the material facts and
circumstances surrounding the transaction.
Arnold v. Society for Sav. Bancorp, Inc.,
Del.Supr., 650 A.2d 1270, 1276 (1994).
Information is deemed material if "there is
a substantial likelihood that a reasonable
shareholder would consider it important in
deciding how to vote ..." Rosenblatt v.
Getty Oil Co., Del.Supr., 493 A.2d 929, 944
(1985) (quoting
TSC Indus., Inc. v. Northway, Inc., 426 U.S.
438, 449, 96 S.Ct. 2126, 2132, 48 L.Ed.2d
757 (1976)). The materiality standard is
an objective one, determined from the
perspective of the reasonable shareholder,
not that of the directors or other party who
undertakes to distribute information. Zirn
v. VLI Corp., Del.Supr., 621 A.2d 773, 779
(1993). In reviewing a ruling pursuant to
these legal standards, this Court will
review the entire record. Id. at 778. "[I]f
the findings of the trial judge are
sufficiently supported by the record and are
the product of an orderly and logical
deductive process, ... we accept them, even
though independently we might have reached
opposite conclusions." Id. (citations
omitted).
We begin our examination of the
record below with the allegedly deficient
documents. The Offer to Purchase,
distributed to Lynch shareholders at the
Board's behest and apparently under
Alcatel's direction, described Alcatel's
negotiation stance as follows:
Discussions between representatives of
Dillon Read on behalf of Alcatel USA and the
Independent Committee and its financial
advisors continued during the period from
November 12 to November 20, 1986. During
such discussions representatives of Alcatel
USA informed the Independent Committee that,
in the event the parties could not reach an
agreement for a transaction, Alcatel USA
would consider the options that were
available to it at that time, including
among other things, making an offer directly
to the stockholders of the Company.
In its 1993 decision, the Court
of Chancery found that the Offer to Purchase
and this
Page 89 language in particular "sufficiently
describe Alcatel's position. They alert a
reasonable investor that Alcatel had a
certain amount of bargaining leverage and
was using it." On remand, the Court of
Chancery held to the same conclusion,
stating: "The Supreme Court's description of
the negotiations as coercive does not
mandate the use of that term in the proxy
materials."
Kahn argues that Alcatel's
description of its negotiating options was
incomplete and misleading and should have
conveyed the additional information that its
"making an offer" would have been "far below
the merger price of $15.50 per share." The
narrow question thus becomes whether a
reasonable shareholder would have considered
the additional language "as having
significantly altered the total mix of
information made available."
Arnold v. Bancorp, 650 A.2d at 1277.
Although the additional language
may have rendered the Offer to Purchase
somewhat more informative by "closing the
circle" on the full extent of Alcatel's
options, we agree with the Court of Chancery
that such additional language was not
required to describe the extent of Alcatel's
bargaining power. See Seibert v. Harper &
Row Publishers, Inc., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
6639, 10 Del.J.Corp.L. 645, 655, 1984 WL
21874, Berger, V.C. (Dec. 5, 1984) (noting
that a proxy statement need not disclose
facts which are "generally known"). There
can be little doubt that Alcatel intended to
acquire the entire equity interest in Lynch
and the description of negotiations
contained in the Offer to Purchase described
its efforts and the responses of the Lynch
Board and the Independent Committee. The
Offer to Purchase disclosed the full range
of value advanced by the parties during
negotiations and notes that the final price
of $15.50 was not within the preliminary
range but reflects the change in financial
projections based on Lynch's third-quarter
results.
Kahn concedes that Alcatel was
not required to describe its own conduct as
coercive but at the same time argues that
the Offer to Purchase should have contained
sufficient facts concerning Alcatel's
negotiation power to permit the minority
shareholders of Lynch to gain the same
impression. This contention overstates the
effect of our holding in Lynch I and
misconceives the requirements of
materiality. Weiss v. Rockwell Int'l Corp.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8811, 15 Del.J.Corp.L.
777, 787, 1989 WL 80345, Jacobs, V.C. (July
10, 1989) ("To argue, as plaintiff does,
that the proxy statement should have
embellished these disclosures by adding to
them a confession of corporate wrongdoing
... is simply not required."), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
574 A.2d 264 (1990). A reasonable
minority shareholder of Lynch was under no
illusions concerning the leverage available
to Alcatel and its willingness to use it to
acquire the minority interest.
Alcatel's consideration of
available options including "making an offer
directly to the stockholders" is obviously
conveying an intent to terminate
negotiations with the Board and engage in a
hostile tender offer. The materiality of the
tendered information is the statement of
Alcatel's range of options and that such
options were disclosed to the Independent
Committee as part of the negotiations that
led to the agreement of the Lynch Board to
recommend the merger prices. In our view
nothing further was required and we find the
holding of the Court of Chancery that no
disclosure violation occurred here to be
clearly supported by the record.
The Court of Chancery's finding
of no disclosure violation, which we
endorse, though not determinative of entire
fairness, is of "persuasive substantive
significance." Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d 1156,
1176 (1995). Such a determination precludes
the award of damages per se, bears directly
upon the manner in which stockholder
approval was obtained, and places this case
in the category of "nonfraudulent
transactions" in which price may be the
preponderant consideration. Id. (quoting
Weinberger v. UOP, Inc., 457 A.2d at 711.)
3 Although the
merger was not conditioned on a majority of
the minority vote, we note that more than 94
percent of the shares were tendered in
response to Alcatel's offer.
Page 90
IV
In summary, after reassessing the
trial record under an entire fairness
standard, with the burden of proof upon
Alcatel, the Court of Chancery determined
that, as a result of the manner by which the
board discharged its fiduciary duties, the
timing and structure of negotiations and the
disclosure to shareholders of such event
were the product of fair dealing. Similarly,
the trial court concluded that the merger
price was fair. Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d at
1172. Thus the non-bifurcated standard of
Weinberger was satisfied. Under our standard
of review, we defer to the trial court's
evidentiary findings if supported by the
record and logically determined. Cinerama,
Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663
A.2d at 1178.
In deciding the ultimate question
of entire fairness, the Court of Chancery
was required to carefully analyze the
factual circumstances in the context of how
the board discharged all of its fiduciary
duties, apply a disciplined balancing
approach to its findings, and articulate the
basis for its decision. Cinerama, Inc. v.
Technicolor, Inc., Del.Supr., 663 A.2d at
1179. The record reflects that was done. We
find no error in the trial court's
application of legal standards and
accordingly affirm. Id.
1 "Alcatel" refers to Alcatel and its
affiliates.
2 The plaintiffs in Ivanhoe were vying
for control of Newmont Mining Corp. and
challenged a street sweep undertaken by a
competitor for control, Consolidated Gold
Fields PLC and its subsidiaries. This Court
upheld the Ivanhoe trial court's
determination that the street sweep, which
was undertaken in cooperation with the
target's management, did not constitute
coercion. However, this Court analyzed the
street sweep in narrower terms than the
Court of Chancery, "view[ing] the street
sweep as part of Newmont's own comprehensive
defensive strategy," and thus under the
guidelines of Unocal. Ivanhoe Partners v.
Newmont Min. Corp., Del.Supr., 535 A.2d
1334, 1343-44 (1987).
3 Our affirmance of the Court of
Chancery's disclosure violation
determination renders unnecessary any
consideration of Kahn's damages claims. |