| Page 392 681 A.2d 392
KAISER ALUMINUM CORPORATION, Maxxam,
Inc., George T.
Haymaker, Jr., Robert M. Cruikshank, Charles
E.
Hurwitz, Ezra G. Levin, Robert Marcus,
and Robert J. Petris,
Defendants Below, Appellants,
v.
Donald MATHESON and Marilyn T. Page,
Plaintiffs Below, Appellees. No. 168, 1996. Supreme Court of Delaware.
Submitted: May 21, 1996.
Decided: Aug. 29, 1996.
Page 393
Robert K. Payson (argued), Donald
J. Wolfe, Jr., Arthur L. Dent and Kevin R.
Shannon, of Potter, Anderson & Corroon,
Wilmington, for Appellants Kaiser Aluminum
Corporation, Robert Marcus, Robert J.
Petris, Robert M. Cruikshank and George T.
Haymaker; Norman J. Blears and Joy Cartun of
Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe, Palo Alto,
of counsel for Appellants Robert Marcus and
Robert J. Petris.
Martin P. Tully, Frederick
Alexander and William M. Lafferty, of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, for Appellants MAXXAM, Inc.,
Charles E. Hurwitz and Ezra G. Levin.
William Prickett and Ronald A.
Brown, Jr. (argued), of Prickett, Jones,
Elliott, Kristol & Schnee, Wilmington,
Arthur T. Susman, of Buehler & Watkins,
Chicago, of counsel for Appellees Donald
Matheson and Marilyn T. Page.
Before VEASEY, C.J., HARTNETT and
BERGER, JJ.
VEASEY, Chief Justice:
In this interlocutory appeal, we
affirm a preliminary injunction order of the
Court of Chancery enjoining the effectuation
of a corporate recapitalization on the
ground that the existing conversion rights
of preferred stockholders cannot be adjusted
as set forth in the proposed
recapitalization without the consent of the
preferred holders. Specifically, we hold
that the existing conversion rights of the
preferred stockholders, as ambiguously
stated in the Certificate of Designations,
should be construed in favor of the
preferred holders to require conversion to
the common stock which existed before the
recapitalization, not the new common stock
resulting from the recapitalization.
Facts
Kaiser Aluminum Corporation
("Kaiser"), its directors and its
controlling stockholder, MAXXAM, Inc.,
appeal from the grant of a preliminary
injunction preventing Kaiser from
implementing a recapitalization plan (the
"Recapitalization"). The Recapitalization
would create two classes of common stock
with one class having disparate voting
rights from the existing single class of
common stock ("Existing Common Stock"). This
result would be achieved by an amendment to
the certificate of incorporation
reclassifying the 100 million authorized
shares of Existing Common Stock as one class
of Class A Common shares ("New Class A
Common") with full voting rights. The
Recapitalization would also authorize the
issuance of an additional 250 million shares
of new, low-voting common stock ("New Common
Stock") possessing voting rights of 1/10
vote per share. Current holders of Existing
Common Stock will receive .33 shares of New
Class A Common and .67 shares of New Common
for each share of Existing Common Stock.
MAXXAM owns 50 million shares of
the 71.6 million shares of Existing Common
Stock currently outstanding. The Plaintiffs
own shares of Preferred Redeemable Increased
Dividend Equity Securities ("PRIDES") issued
by Kaiser in February of 1994.
1
Kaiser has issued 8,673,850 of the
20,000,000 shares of PRIDES authorized by
its Certificate of Incorporation. The PRIDES
are convertible into .8333 shares of Common
Stock
2 at the
option of the holder prior to December 31,
1997. Between December 31, 1996 and December
31, 1997, Kaiser can redeem the PRIDES at a
conversion ratio based on the market price
of the Common Stock but subject to a minimum
Page 394 redemption value of .8333 shares of Common
Stock for each share of PRIDES. On December
31, 1997, each share of PRIDES converts
automatically into one share of Common
Stock. The PRIDES have 4/5 vote per share
and vote with the common shares.
Kaiser intends to adjust the
conversion ratio for the PRIDES so that each
share of PRIDES will convert on December 31,
1997 into .33 shares of New Class A Common
and .67 shares of New Common. The Plaintiffs
filed suit on March 19, 1996 seeking, inter
alia, to enjoin the special stockholders'
meeting scheduled for April 10, 1996 at
which a vote on the Recapitalization was to
be taken. The Plaintiffs asserted four
claims in their complaint: (1) that the
Certificate of Designations (the
"Certificate")
3
for the PRIDES does not permit Kaiser to
change, pursuant to a reclassification, the
security into which the PRIDES are
convertible; (2) that Kaiser is required to
procure a separate class vote of the PRIDES;
(3) that the proxy statement issued in
connection with the special meeting omits
material facts and misstates material facts;
and (4) that the Recapitalization is the
result of breaches of the duties of care and
loyalty owed to the Plaintiffs by the
directors of Kaiser and its controlling
stockholder, MAXXAM.
On April 10, 1996, the Court of
Chancery issued a preliminary injunction
against the consummation of the amendment to
the Certificate of Incorporation but allowed
the meeting and vote to proceed. The meeting
was adjourned until May 1, 1996. On April
19, 1996, this Court granted the Defendants'
motion for an expedited interlocutory
appeal. The special meeting was held on May
1, 1996 and the proposal received the vote
of a majority of outstanding shares.
Standard and Scope of Review
Preliminarily, we must address
the proper standard of review of the Court
of Chancery's decision to grant the
preliminary injunction. The plaintiffs
contend that this appeal from the grant of a
preliminary injunction should be reviewed
only for abuse of discretion.
Generally, the grant or denial of
a preliminary injunction is reviewed for
abuse of discretion. Wilmington Sav. Fund
Society, FSB v. Covell, Del.Supr., No. 152,
1990, 1990 WL 84687, Walsh, J. (May 16,
1990) (ORDER); Plant Indus. v. Katz,
Del.Supr., No. 123, 1981, 435 A.2d 1044,
Quillen, J. (May 1, 1981) (ORDER). Federal
appellate courts follow the same approach.
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc., 422 U.S. 922,
931-32, 95 S.Ct. 2561, 2568, 45 L.Ed.2d 648
(1975) ("[T]he standard of appellate
review is simply whether the issuance of the
injunction, in the light of the applicable
standard, constituted an abuse of
discretion."); see also DSC Communications
Corp. v. DGI Technologies, Inc., 5th Cir.,
81 F.3d 597, 599 (1996). Nevertheless, this
Court reviews the grant of a preliminary
injunction without deference to the embedded
legal conclusions of the trial court. See
Unitrin, Inc. v. American Gen. Corp.,
Del.Supr.,
651 A.2d 1361 (1995).
4
The decision to grant or deny a
preliminary injunction requires the trial
court to consider whether the plaintiff has
established: (1) a reasonable probability of
success on the merits; (2) irreparable harm;
and (3) a balance of equities in its favor.
Allen v. Prime Computer, Inc., Del.Supr.,
540 A.2d 417, 419 (1988). Here, the Court of
Chancery proceeded to the "probability of
success" prong and granted the injunction
based solely on the language of the
Certificate, the Proxy Statement and the
Prospectus. Accordingly, we will consider de
novo the meaning of the Certificate.
Waggoner v. Laster, Del.Supr., 581 A.2d
1127, 1132-33 (1990).
Page 395
Interpretation of the Certificate
The preferences and conversion
rights of the PRIDES are governed by the
Certificate. Wood v. Coastal States Gas
Corp., Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 932, 937 (1979);
Jedwab v. MGM Grand Hotels, Inc., Del.Ch.,
509 A.2d 584, 593 (1986). The Certificate is
interpreted using standard rules of contract
interpretation which require a court to
determine from the language of the contract
the intent of the parties. Waggoner, 581
A.2d at 1134. In discerning the intent of
the parties, the Certificate should be read
as a whole and, if possible, interpreted to
reconcile all of the provisions of the
document. Warner Communications Inc. v.
Chris-Craft Indus., Inc., Del.Ch., 583 A.2d
962, 967, aff'd, Del.Supr.,
567 A.2d 419
(1989).
If no ambiguity is present, the
Court must give effect to the clear language
of the Certificate. Johnston v. Tally Ho,
Inc., Del.Super., 303 A.2d 677, 679 (1973).
"A contract is not rendered ambiguous simply
because the parties do not agree upon its
proper construction. Rather, a contract is
ambiguous only when the provisions in
controversy are reasonably or fairly
susceptible of different interpretations or
may have two or more different meanings."
Rhone-Poulenc Basic Chems. Co. v. American
Motorists Ins. Co., Del.Supr., 616 A.2d
1192, 1196 (1992) (insurance contract). In
this case, as in the context of the
insurance contract under consideration in
Rhone-Poulenc, "[t]he true test is not what
the parties to the contract intended it to
mean, but what a reasonable person in the
position of the parties would have thought
it meant." Id. (citing Steigler v. Insurance
Co. of N. America, Del.Supr., 384 A.2d 398,
401 (1978) (contracts should be read to
accord with the reasonable expectations of a
reasonable purchaser)). Where, as here, the
ultimate purchaser of the securities is not
a party to the drafting of the instrument
which determines her rights, the reasonable
expectations of the purchaser of the
securities must be given effect.
The PRIDES are a convertible
security. Accordingly, the Certificate sets
forth detailed language broadly referred to
as anti-dilution adjustments.
5
Such provisions protect the value of the
conversion feature in the case of certain
events which could otherwise reduce the
value of that into which the PRIDES convert,
namely the Common Stock of Kaiser.
The provision at issue is section
3(d)(i) of the Certificate, which states:
(d) Common Equivalent Rate and
Optional Conversion Rate Adjustments.
* * * * * *
(i) If the Corporation shall
either:
(1) pay a dividend or make a
distribution with respect to Common Stock
6 in shares of
Common Stock,
(2) subdivide or split its
outstanding shares of Common Stock into a
greater number of shares,
(3) combine its outstanding
shares of Common Stock into a smaller number
of shares, or
(4) issue by reclassification of
its shares of Common Stock any shares of
common stock of the Corporation
then, in any such event, [the conversion
rates] in effect immediately prior thereto
shall each be adjusted so that the holder of
a share of PRIDES shall be entitled to
receive, on the conversion of such share of
PRIDES, the number of shares of Common Stock
of the Corporation which such holder would
have owned or been entitled to receive after
the happening of any of the events described
above had such share of PRIDES been
converted ... immediately prior to the
happening of such event ...
(Emphasis supplied.) Kaiser
contends that the provision contemplates
that the PRIDES holders will receive on
conversion "whatever new securities the
holders of the underlying security received
in the corporate transactions covered by
those adjustment provisions."
Page 396
The Plaintiffs contend that the
use of upper case (Common Stock) and lower
case (common stock) in different parts of
3(d)(i)(4) compels the result reached below:
Section 3(d)(i)(4) clearly differentiates
between two kinds of stock: (1) the "Common
Stock" that is being reclassified and (2)
the "common stock" that is newly issued as a
result of the reclassification. The
operative language of the "then" clause of
the anti-dilution provision states that
after such a reclassification the PRIDES
still converts into the "Common Stock" that
was reclassified--whatever it is--rather
than the new "common stock."
Kaiser's explanation for the use
of "Common Stock" in the then clause of the
Certificate is less than satisfying. Kaiser
explains the use of "Common Stock" as
follows:
Why then is the term lower case "common
stock" used at all in the "if" clause? The
drafter was simply distinguishing between
the old and the new. Prior to the
effectiveness of a reclassification, the new
common stock would not yet have been
substituted into the conversion rate;
accordingly, it would have been
inappropriate to use the specific defined
term from Section 3(a)(i), which dealt only
with the conversion rate. The capitalized
term in the "then" clause refers to the same
stock, but only after it has been
substituted for the old stock in the
conversion rate.
The Certificate could have stated
clearly the result for which Kaiser contends
by drawing from the Certificate itself. It
did not clearly so state. As the plaintiffs
point out, section 3(e) contains the
traditional language employed to achieve
such a result. It states:
(e) Adjustment for Certain
Mergers and Other Transactions. In case of
any consolidation or merger ... each share
of PRIDES shall, after consummation of such
transaction, be subject to ... conversion
... into the kind and amount of securities,
cash, or other property receivable upon
consummation of such transaction by a holder
of the number of shares of Common Stock into
which such share of PRIDES might have been
converted immediately before consummation of
such transaction....
Other examples also illustrate
the ease with which the documents governing
convertible securities can express such an
intent. The Model Debenture Indenture
specifically treats a reclassification in
such a manner:
If any ... reclassification of the
capital stock of the Company ... shall be
effected in such a way that holders of
Common Stock shall be entitled to receive
stock, securities or assets with respect to
or in exchange for Common Stock, then, ...
the Company ... shall execute ... a
supplemental indenture providing that the
Holder of each Debenture then Outstanding
shall have the right thereafter and until
the expiration of the period of
convertibility to convert such Debenture
into the kind and amount of stock,
securities or assets receivable upon such
... reclassification ... by a holder of the
number of shares of Common Stock into which
such Debenture might have been converted
immediately prior to such ...
reclassification....
American Bar Foundation,
Commentaries on Model Debenture Indenture
Provisions, Article Thirteen,
Conversion--Sample Provisions § 13-6
(Alternate 1) (1971).
Unlike the Model Debenture
Indenture, the more recent Model Simplified
Indenture (the "MSI") adjusts the conversion
rate in the case of a reclassification in a
manner more similar to the Certificate. In
fact, the Certificate bears a striking
resemblance, in certain respects, to the
analogous MSI provision. The MSI provides:
Section 10.06. Adjustment for Change in
Capital Stock.
If the Company:
(1) pays a dividend or makes a
distribution on its Common Stock
7 in shares of its Common
Stock;
Page 397
(2) subdivides its outstanding
shares of Common Stock into a greater number
of shares;
(3) combines its outstanding
shares of Common Stock into a smaller number
of shares;
(4) makes a distribution on its
Common Stock in shares of its capital stock
other than Common Stock; or
(5) issues by reclassification of
its Common Stock any shares of its capital
stock,
then the conversion privilege and the
conversion price in effect immediately prior
to such action shall be adjusted so that the
Holder of a Security thereafter converted
may receive the number of shares of capital
stock of the Company which he would have
owned immediately following such action if
he had converted the Security immediately
prior to such action.
The adjustment shall become
effective immediately after the record date
in the case of a dividend or distribution
and immediately after the effective date in
the case of a subdivision, combination or
reclassification.
If after an adjustment a Holder
of a Security upon conversion of it may
receive shares of two or more classes of
capital stock of the Company, the Company
shall determine the allocation of the
adjusted conversion price between the
classes of capital stock. After such
allocation, the conversion privilege and the
conversion price of each class of capital
stock shall thereafter be subject to
adjustment on terms comparable to those
applicable to Common Stock in this Article.
Model Simplified Indenture, 38
BUS.LAW. 741, 765-766 (Feb.1983).
The MSI employs the term "capital
stock" in the then clause.
8
If the Certificate used "common stock,"
instead of "Common Stock," in the then
clause, the capitalization would match the
MSI. Such a choice of capitalization would
more clearly yield the result for which
Kaiser argues since Plaintiffs could not
argue that they are entitled to the existing
"Common Stock." They would receive upon
conversion whatever "common stock" was
issued in the reclassification.
Noticeably absent, as well, is a
paragraph similar to the last paragraph of
section 10.06 of the MSI, which specifically
contemplates a dual-class reclassification.
Had such a provision been present, an
interpretation of the Certificate which did
not allow the company to convert the PRIDES
into two classes of common stock would leave
that section as surplusage.
Our consideration of these
alternative formulations does not mean, of
course, that issuers must follow model
provisions. Such models are an aid to
drafting and construction. If they are
borrowed verbatim by the drafters,
interpretation may be enhanced, but
interpretation may become problematic if the
drafter excludes key language from the model
provision.
Reference to such models also
does not imply that the Plaintiffs'
interpretation is necessarily correct or
completely satisfying. The Certificate is
hopelessly unclear on the very point at
issue. Other efforts at anti-dilution
provisions indicate, however, that the
Certificate could have clearly stated the
intent for which Kaiser now argues. That
much is evident from widely available models
and other provisions of the Certificate.
When a contract is ambiguous, a
court normally relies upon extrinsic
evidence of the parties' intent. Such a
course is not appropriate in this case for
two reasons. First, such an investigation
would reveal information about the thoughts
and positions of, at most, the issuer and
the underwriter. Whether these parties can
legitimately be viewed as "negotiating"
indenture provisions is a subject of some
dispute. Compare Prescott, Ball & Turben v.
LTV Corp., S.D.N.Y., 531 F.Supp. 213, 217
(1981), with Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc. v.
Archer Daniels Midland Co., S.D.N.Y., 570
F.Supp. 1529, 1541 (1983); see also Martin
Riger, The Trust Indenture as Bargained
Contract: The Persistence of Myth, 16
J.CORP.L. 211, 216 (1991); Dale B. Tauke,
Should Bonds Have
Page 398 More Fun? A Reexamination of the Debate Over
Corporate Bondholder Rights, 1989
COLUM.BUS.L.REV. 1, 23-24 (1989). Since
these sorts of provisions "are ... not the
consequence of the relationship of
particular borrowers and lenders and do not
depend upon particularized intentions of the
parties to an indenture," evidence of the
course of negotiations would not be helpful.
Sharon Steel Corp. v. Chase Manhattan Bank,
N.A., 2d Cir., 691 F.2d 1039, 1048 (1982);
see also Tauke, 1989 COLUM.BUS.L.REV. at 82
("the search for expectations is complicated
by the fact that investors constitute a
diverse group").
Second, we are reluctant to risk
disuniformity by adverting to evidence of
the course of negotiation in a setting in
which the same language can be found in many
different contracts. A leading case in the
interpretation of indenture provisions
remarks:
Whereas participants in the capital
markets can adjust their affairs according
to a uniform interpretation, whether it be
correct or not as an initial proposition,
the creation of enduring uncertainties as to
the meaning of boilerplate provisions would
decrease the value of all debenture issues
and greatly impair the efficient working of
capital markets. Such uncertainties would
vastly increase the risks and, therefore,
the costs of borrowing with no offsetting
benefits either in the capital market or in
the administration of justice. Just such
uncertainties would be created if
interpretation of boilerplate provisions
were submitted to juries sitting in every
judicial district in the nation.
Sharon Steel Corp., 691 F.2d at
1048; accord Broad v. Rockwell Int'l Corp.,
5th Cir., 642 F.2d 929, 943 (1981). While
future adjudications in the Court of
Chancery do not pose the same risk of
inconsistent interpretations, individual
factual determinations about who drafted
what would introduce a similar degree of
inconsistency between identically worded
documents.
We are left then with a
hopelessly ambiguous contract and a
reluctance to rely upon extrinsic evidence.
Burden of the Ambiguity
It is a well-accepted principle
that ambiguities in a contract should be
construed against the drafter. RESTATEMENT
(SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 206 (1981); see also
Arthur L. Corbin, et al., CORBIN ON
CONTRACTS § 559, supp. at 337 (1960 &
Supp.1996) ("imposed as a matter of public
policy as a penalty for bad draftsmanship").
Courts have disagreed, however, whether the
principle should apply in the case of
detailed indentures or similar documents.
9 This reflects,
in part, contrasting views regarding the
respective roles played by underwriters and
issuers. See, e.g., Simons v. Cogan,
Del.Ch., 542 A.2d 785, 791 (1987), aff'd,
Del.Supr.,
549 A.2d 300 (1988)
("Underwriters of convertible securities do
have an interest in negotiating protection
on points regarded as material by ultimate
purchasers of those securities.");
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. RJR Nabisco,
Inc., S.D.N.Y., 716 F.Supp. 1504, 1509
(1989) ("Since the underwriters must then
sell or place the bonds, they necessarily
negotiate in part with the interests of the
buyers in mind.").
In B.S.F. Co. v. Philadelphia
Nat'l Bank, Del.Supr.,
204 A.2d 746 (1964),
the Court reversed a decision of the Court
of Chancery which construed against the
issuer what the Court of Chancery considered
an ambiguous indenture provision. This
Court, applying Pennsylvania law, did not
consider the applicability of the principle
to indentures because it found that the
language was not ambiguous. Id. at 751 ("The
difficulty we think with this holding is
that there is no ambiguity in the
Indenture."). Unlike the indenture at issue
in B.S.F., however, the ambiguity here is
manifest and insoluble.
We agree that "[w]hile debtor
corporations are not the actual drafters of
bond contracts, they are in a much better
position to clarify the meaning of ...
contract terms in advance of disputes than
are investors generally." Tauke, 1989
COLUM.BUS.L.REV. at 87. The issuer is
"better able to clarify unclear bond
contract terms in advance so as to avoid
Page 399 future disputes and therefore should bear
the drafting burden that the contra
proferentem principle would impose upon it."
Id. at 89; see also Simons, 542 A.2d at 786
("the purchaser ... is offered, and
voluntarily accepts, a security whose myriad
terms are highly specified"). Moreover, when
faced with an ambiguous provision in a
document such as the Certificate, the Court
must construe the document to adhere to the
reasonable expectations of the investors who
purchased the security and thereby subjected
themselves to the terms of the contract.
Rhone-Poulenc, 616 A.2d at 1196.
We caution against this principle
becoming "a short-cut for avoiding the
sometimes difficult tasks of determining
expectations...." Tauke, 1989
COLUM.BUS.L.REV. at 88. Certificates of
Designation and indentures are necessarily
complex documents prepared by sophisticated
drafters. They require some effort and
careful thought to understand. In the normal
course of events, the four corners of the
document will yield a result which is
consistent with reasonable expectations. See
William W. Bratton, Jr., The Interpretation
of Contracts Concerning Corporate Debt
Relationships, 5 CARDOZO L.REV. 371, 379
(1984). We apply the contra proferentem
principle here only as a last resort because
the language of the Certificate presents a
hopeless ambiguity, particularly when
alternative formulations indicate that these
provisions could easily have been made
clear.
10
Conclusion
The Vice Chancellor's approach in
this case was correct and well done,
particularly considering the fact that his
decisionmaking in this complex and unusual
matter was accomplished in the very short
time frame appropriate for injunction
proceedings. We share the Vice Chancellor's
concern that it is difficult to find that
drafters of sophisticated corporate
documents left such an ambiguity as this one
and were relegated to rely on the
uppercase-lowercase rationale. The Vice
Chancellor correctly concluded that this
rationale could not save the corporate
document from foundering on the reef of its
own ambiguity.
Since we hold that the
Certificate does not permit Kaiser
unilaterally to change the conversion rights
of the PRIDES, as contemplated in the
proposed amendment to its Certificate of
Incorporation, we need not reach the other
contentions raised by the parties. Our
disposition here is limited to the question
of whether the preliminary injunction
ordered by the Court of Chancery was
properly granted. We do not speculate on
future steps the parties may undertake in
light of this Opinion. In order to secure
more permanent relief, Plaintiffs must still
press their claims at the trial level.
Accordingly, the interlocutory order of the
Court of Chancery granting the preliminary
injunction is AFFIRMED and the matter is
REMANDED to the Court of Chancery for
further proceedings consistent with this
Opinion. Jurisdiction is not retained.
1 One of the plaintiffs, Donald Matheson,
also owns common shares of Kaiser.
2 Since the crux of the debate between
the parties is whether the PRIDES are
convertible into the Common Stock as it
exists prior to the proposed
recapitalization (i.e., "Existing Common
Stock") or in its altered,
post-recapitalization form, the generic term
"Common Stock" is used here in place of the
term "Existing Common Stock." This
terminology matches the language of the
Certificate of Designations which, aside
from the anomalous reference in § 3(d)(i)
discussed infra, refers simply to "Common
Stock."
3 When the Certificate of Designations
became effective in February of 1994, it had
the effect of amending the Certificate of
Incorporation so that the rights of the
preferred stockholders fixed by the
Certificate became part of the Certificate
of Incorporation. 8 Del.C. §§ 102(a)(4);
151(g).
4 As the Plaintiffs recognize, this Court
has often reviewed the grant or denial of a
preliminary injunction in corporate
litigation. See, e.g., Unocal Corp. v. Mesa
Petroleum Co., Del.Supr.,
493 A.2d 946
(1985); Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings, Inc., Del.Supr.,
506 A.2d 173
(1985); Ivanhoe Partners v. Newmont Mining
Corp., Del.Supr.,
535 A.2d 1334 (1987);
Mills Acquisition Co. v. Macmillan, Inc.,
Del.Supr.,
559 A.2d 1261 (1988); Paramount
Communications, Inc. v. Time Inc., Del.Supr.,
571 A.2d 1140 (1989). In all of these cases,
this Court has exercised de novo review of
legal issues.
5 The issues presented by this case are
not of recent origin. See Parkinson v. West
End St. Ry. Co., Sup.Jud.Ct., 173 Mass. 446,
53 N.E. 891 (1899) (Holmes, J.) (considering
rights of convertible security holders);
George S. Hills, Convertible Securities:
Legal Aspects and Draftsmanship, 19
CAL.L.REV. 1 (1930); Richard M. Buxbaum,
Preferred Stock: Law and Draftsmanship, 42
CAL.L.REV. 243 (1954).
6 Common Stock is defined as "fully paid
and non-assessable shares of common stock of
the Corporation." Certificate § 3(a)(i).
7 Unlike the Certificate, section 10.01
of the MSI defines Common Stock as "Common
Stock of the Company as it exists on the
date of this Indenture as originally
signed."
8 The Certificate uses the narrower term
"common stock" to exclude reclassifications
in which preferred stock is issued. Such a
reclassification would, arguably, be covered
by section 3(d)(iii).
9 Compare Prescott, Ball & Turben v. LTV
Corp., S.D.N.Y., 531 F.Supp. 213, 217
(1981), with Morgan Stanley & Co., Inc. v.
Archer Daniels Midland Co., S.D.N.Y., 570
F.Supp. 1529, 1541 (1983).
10 Contra Prescott, Ball & Turben v. LTV
Corp., S.D.N.Y., 531 F.Supp. 213, 217
(1981). |