| Page 422 683 F.Supp. 422
CRTF CORPORATION, Plaintiff,
v.
FEDERATED DEPARTMENT STORES, INC., Charlotte
Beers, Philip Caldwell, Robert A. Charpie,
Daniel W. LeBlond, Howard Goldfeder, Howard
W. Johnson, Norman S. Matthews, G. William
Miller, Donald J. Stone and Will M. Storey,
Defendants.
R.H. MACY & CO., INC. and FDS Acquisition
Corporation, Plaintiffs,
v.
CAMPEAU CORPORATION, CRTF Corporation and
Robert Campeau, Defendants. No. 88 CIV 0487 (LBS). No. 88 CIV 1548 (LBS). United States District Court, S.D.
New York. April 14, 1988.
Page 423
Cravath, Swaine & Moore, New York
City (Frederick A.O. Schwarz, Jr., Robert F.
Mullen, Ronald S. Rolfe, Allen Finkelson,
Sandra Grannum, Robert A. Kindler, of
counsel), and O'Sullivan Graev & Karabell,
New York City (Henry B. Gutman, J. Douglas
Richards, John S. Beckerman, of counsel),
for CRTF Corp., Campeau Corp. and Robert
Campeau.
Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher &
Flom, New York City (Stuart L. Shapiro,
Samuel Kadet, Rodman Ward, Jr., Edward
Welch, Constance Huttner, Joseph
Guglielmelli, Jeremy Berman, David Cohen,
Anthony Clark, of counsel), and Morris,
Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell, Wilmington, Del.
(A. Gilchrist Sparks, III, Lawrence A.
Hamermesh, Kenneth J. Nachbar, Michael
Houghton, Robert J. Valihura, Jr., of
counsel), for Federated Dept. Stores, Inc.
and other named defendants.
Weil, Gotshal & Manges, New York
City, Dennis J. Block, Joseph S. Allerhand,
Andrea J. Roth, David J. Berger, for R.H.
Macy & Co., Inc. and FDS Acquisition Corp.
OPINION
SAND, District Judge.
SUMMARY
We summarize herein several
rulings made in open court during the course
of proceedings in connection with
Plaintiff's application for preliminary
injunctive relief. We restate these rulings
substantially as set forth in our oral
Opinions with minor stylistic changes and
additional citation of authority. Although
the controversy has since been resolved by a
consensual agreement among the parties, the
issues presented herein appear to be
sufficiently recurring to warrant issuance
of this Opinion.
We have held:
Page 424
A) that in determining a tender
offeror's standing to challenge a target
company's "Poison Pill" and/or a state's
takeover statute, a court should determine
whether the offer is a good-faith, realistic
offer; to this end, the court may consider
all of the facts and circumstances relating
to the Plaintiff's past history, if any, its
current financing capability, and the extent
of its investment in the instant project;
B) that as part of the obligation
of a Board of Directors of a Delaware
corporation to conduct an "auction" in a
manner which will maximize the benefits to
the shareholders once the corporation is the
target of competing takeover bids and the
Board has determined that the corporation is
to be sold, the Board may selectively invoke
or waive rights under a previously adopted
"Poison Pill" in order to further the
auction and to raise the bidding;
C) that the Court would not
overrule the Board of Directors'
determination that the auction was still in
progress, especially in the absence of a
representation by the bidding party seeking
preliminary injunctive relief that it
believes its bid is the higher (or highest),
and that in the absence of a still higher,
later, competing bid, it has made its
highest and final bid;
D) that the revision of an offer
from a single-tier, all-cash offer to a
two-tiered all-cash offer constitutes an
"amended" offer rather than a "new" offer,
and therefore can have an expiration date of
ten rather than twenty business days after
its promulgation.
INTRODUCTION
Recent experience has shown us
that the early resort to litigation in the
typical hostile takeover struggle places the
courts in a unique and sometimes anomalous
posture.1 This
occurs primarily because the initial tender
offer is likely to be a mere opening bid
regarded by the parties and the financial
markets as a tentative feeler. Despite this
volatile state of affairs, either the
offeror or the target is likely to seek
immediate judicial relief, seeking to enlist
the court as its ally in the battle being
waged in the marketplace. Thus, although
courts usually are involved when the parties
have exhausted their efforts to resolve a
controversy and are at an impasse, here
judicial intervention is sought at the
earliest stages of the dealings between the
parties.
The relief sought may be a
challenge by the target to the accuracy of
the offeror's SEC or state law filings, or
an application by the offeror to enjoin the
target from utilizing defensive measures
available to it under its by-laws (such as a
"Poison Pill") or recently adopted state
takeover statutes. The offeror may also seek
to prevent the target from entering into
arrangements with third parties that would
frustrate the offer.
The tender offer usually has an
early expiration date. Enormous sums of
money are often at stake. Stockholders and
the financial community at large are
concerned and seek guidance and certainty
from any source and especially from the
court. The pressures to rush into the fray
are therefore great indeed.
Counter-balancing these pressures are a
strong reluctance to interfere with the
unfettered forces of the market, and a
concern that a premature adjudication will
be merely an advisory opinion rendered while
negotiations are still underway.
In striking a balance between the
apparent urgent need for prompt adjudication
and the desire not to be a mere player on
the takeover scene, courts have invoked a
number of concepts designed to test and
measure the appropriateness of judicial
intervention. These include the requirements
that a case and controversy in fact exist
between the parties; that the controversy be
one which the Plaintiff has standing to
bring to the courts; that the controversy be
ripe for adjudication and, where injunctive
relief is sought, that the movant would
suffer irreparable injury absent judicial
intervention.
Page 425
OPINION OF FEBRUARY 11, 1988 (MOTION
TO DISMISS)
On January 25, 1988, CRTF Corp.
("CRTF"), a New York subsidiary of Campeau
Corp., commenced a cash tender offer for all
shares of Federated Department Stores
("Federated"), originally at a price of $47
per share. In supplemental filings made to
the Court today, the Court is advised that
the amount of that cash offer was revised
upward.
On the same day it filed the
tender offer, CRTF filed suit against
Federated in this Federal District Court,
seeking injunctive and declaratory relief
against Federated and some of its officers
and directors:
1) claiming breach of fiduciary
duty and demanding invalidation of a Rights
Plan that Plaintiff describes as a "Poison
Pill"; and
2) claiming violation of the
federal securities law, § 14(e) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, alleging
that Federated's press release of January
21, 1988 was false and misleading and was
made in anticipation of a tender offer.
CRTF also sought expedited
discovery at that time.
The tender offer is due to expire
on February 22 unless extended and was
originally conditioned on several things,
including:
1) approval of the offer by the
Board of Directors, a condition which recent
supplemental filings indicate has now been
removed;
2) the invalidation of the Poison
Pill or the redemption of the Rights by the
Board of Directors;
3) the absence of valid
conflicting legislation; and
4) CRTF's obtaining sufficient
financing.
Defendants moved promptly to
dismiss on several grounds, including:
1) ripeness and standing issues,
asserting that:
a) the lack of committed
financing precluded ripeness, standing and
the existence of a case or controversy;
b) the complaint is to some
extent based on what Plaintiff expects the
directors to do in the future;
c) Plaintiff should proceed by
shareholders' derivative suit; and
d) certain of the alleged wrongs
occurred prior to Plaintiff's ownership of
stock in the company;
2) the existence of indispensable
parties not joined in this action, whose
joinder would destroy diversity
jurisdiction;
3) a lack of pendent jurisdiction
because of the inapplicability of the
federal securities claim; and
4) a claim that the Court should
in its discretion refrain from taking
jurisdiction because of the "internal
affairs doctrine."
Finding the ripeness and standing
issues to be troublesome, the Court on
February 2 wrote to the Securities and
Exchange Commission ("SEC") requesting that
that agency submit an Amicus Curiae Brief as
to those threshold questions. The letter of
the Court to the SEC has previously been
marked as a Court Exhibit in these
proceedings, and the SEC's brief is also on
file with the Court. (Relevant excerpts from
the brief are quoted below.)
Also on February 2, Plaintiff
filed a First Amended Complaint, adding a
challenge to the constitutionality of the
Delaware takeover statute, enacted that very
day.
Certification under 28 U.S.C. §
2403(b) was forwarded to the Attorney
General of the State of Delaware on February
3, and the Attorney General of Delaware has
been advised of today's proceeding. We were
advised by telephone within the past hour
that there is en route to the Court a
communication from the Attorney General, the
substance of which is that, because the
motion now before the Court might be
dispositive, his office sees no need to
intervene in the case at the present time,
as such intervention would be premature.
Upon receipt of a telephone call
yesterday from the SEC informing us that its
brief would arrive today, the Court advised
the parties that it would rule today on the
motion to dismiss. It also invited the
parties to supplement the record with
respect
Page 426
to any changes that might have occurred
and as to any filings and financing
arrangements entered into over the past few
days. Affidavits were received midday today,
apprising the Court of some recent
developments and including copies of
subsequent SEC filings, that is, subsequent
to the last appearance of the parties before
me.
The issues raised by the motion
to dismiss would warrant disposition by a
formal opinion with greater elaboration and
citation of authority than the circumstances
permit. The Court notes that it is now late
afternoon on Thursday, February 11, that
Friday, February 12, and Monday, February
15, are official Court holidays, and that
the tender offer, unless extended, expires
on February 22. The Court reserves the right
to edit this Opinion stylistically but not
to alter the substance of these rulings.
We deal first with the motion to
dismiss insofar as it is predicated on an
alleged lack of diversity jurisdiction. The
Defendants claim that all directors, not
simply the four directors named in the
complaint, are indispensable parties and
must be joined. Defendants further assert
that if all were joined, there would not be
complete diversity of citizenship because
some of the directors, like the Plaintiff,
are citizens of New York.
"The directors and officers of
the corporation, unless individually accused
of wrongdoing, usually will not be regarded
as indispensable parties to actions
involving the corporation." 7 C. Wright, A.
Miller and M. Kane, Federal Practice and
Procedure, § 1615 at 233-34 (footnote
omitted).
The requirement that a director
be joined if individually accused of
wrongdoing exists so that he or she will be
able to mount a defense when the relief
sought would be assessed against him or her
individually, and so that the relief sought
could indeed be granted against him or her
should the Plaintiff prevail.
See Dowd v. Front Range Mines, Inc.,
242 F.Supp. 591, 597 (D.Colo.1965) (citing
13 Fletcher Cyclopedia Corporations, § 5996,
at 549);
Miller v. American Telephone & Telegraph
Co., 394 F.Supp. 58, 65 (E.D.Pa. 1975),
aff'd 530 F.2d 964 (1976) ("A
stockholders' derivative suit charging
fraudulent or improper action on the part of
the corporation's directors, which seeks
relief against them as individuals, cannot
proceed in the absence of proper joinder of
the directors as defendants.") (citing
Castner v. First National Bank of Anchorage,
278 F.2d 376, 384 (9th Cir.1960)).
Thus, a director who was accused
of having knowledge of alleged collusion and
fraud, whom plaintiffs sought to enjoin
personally from enforcing a state judgment
allegedly obtained through that fraud, was a
"proper party" (and presumably, in fact,
indispensable), while a director against
whom no relief was sought could have the
case dismissed against him.
Dowd v. Front Range Mines, Inc., 242
F.Supp. at 597. Where the relief sought
included an accounting on behalf of the
corporation by individual officers and
directors, they were indispensable parties.
Sylvia Martin Foundation Inc. v.
Swearingen, 260 F.Supp. 231, 234
(S.D.N.Y.1966).
Similarly, where the issue was as
to which directors were to continue to serve
as directors after a contested election, all
of the directors were indispensable parties
because "a judgment [would] affect their
individual interest," and the corporation
had an interest in avoiding the multiple
litigation that would certainly follow if
all were not joined.
Prescott v. Plant Industries, Inc.,
88 F.R.D. 257, 261 (S.D.N.Y. 1980).
Where the directors are accused
of breach of fiduciary duty for actions
taken as a Board, this does not constitute
the sort of individual accusation that
requires the joinder of all directors. With
respect to shareholders' derivative suits,
Professor Moore has stated: "Since those who
have wronged the corporation are tortfeasors
whose liability is both joint and several,
any one or more of them may be joined as the
plaintiff sees fit." 3A J. Moore's Federal
Practice, 9.13[1] at 19-227 (1987).
At least one director must be
named in a shareholders' derivative suit,
because
Page 427
there the corporation is in some sense a
plaintiff even if named as a defendant, and
thus, the suit would otherwise suffer from
the total absence of a substantial
defendant.
Young v. Colgate-Palmolive Co., 790
F.2d 567, 572-73 (7th Cir.1986);
Miller v. AT & T, 394 F.Supp. at 65;
Isaac v. Milton Mfg. Co., 33 F.Supp.
732, 737-38 (M.D.Pa. 1940).
However, not even a majority of
directors need be joined when the relief
sought is corporate action that a court can
order. Thus a suit for payment of a dividend
was allowed to proceed where only three of
the twelve directors had been joined.
Kroese v. General Steel Castings Corp.,
179 F.2d 760 (3d Cir.1949). The court
reasoned that where the relief would entail
not the exercise of business judgment by the
directors but merely their performance of
the ministerial tasks required to effect the
court's judgment, there was no need to join
even a majority of them. Id. at
762-64.
Where the joinder of certain
directors would defeat the court's
jurisdiction, the general rule is now that,
absent the likelihood of prejudice to the
unjoined directors, the case should proceed
without them. See 7 C. Wright, A.
Miller and M. Kane, Federal Practice and
Procedure, § 1610 at 147-48 (1986);
Duman v. Crown Zellerbach Corp., 107
F.R.D. 761, 763 (N.D.Ill., E.D.1985).
Where a suit was brought against a benefits
"Plan," its administrator, and its twelve
trustees, the Plaintiff was allowed to drop
two trustees and the administrator, who had
previously been joined but whose presence
would destroy diversity, because any
judgment for the Plaintiff would almost
certainly be settled out of the Plan's, not
the individuals', assets.
Prescription Plan Service Corp. v.
Franco, 552 F.2d 493, 497 (2d Cir.1977).
This rule appears to be
particularly valid with respect to the type
of suit at issue here. In a recent case in
this district where the relief sought was an
injunction against corporate action to
implement a rights plan, the case was
adjudicated despite the absence of one
director whose joinder "apparently ... would
have destroyed diversity."
Amalgamated Sugar Co. v. NL Industries,
644 F.Supp. 1229, 1231 (S.D.N.Y.1986),
aff'd, 825 F.2d 634 (1987). Where the
relief sought was an injunction compelling
the defendant corporation to redeem rights
in a "poison pill" controversy, and seven of
the thirteen directors were not amenable to
suit in Illinois because of the lack of
personal jurisdiction over them, the Court
specifically found that those directors were
not indispensable parties.
Duman v. Crown Zellerbach Corp., 107
F.R.D. at 763.
We thus find that the seven
unnamed directors of the defendant are not
indispensable parties and that the Court
does not lack diversity jurisdiction.
(We note that defendants further
urged that there was no pendent jurisdiction
because there was no valid federal
securities claim against Federated. We
believe that this ground for the motion was
mooted by the amendment to the complaint,
which now includes a challenge to the
constitutionality of the Delaware statute.)
We turn next to the motion to
dismiss insofar as it is predicated on the
"internal affairs doctrine." Defendants
claim that under the internal affairs
doctrine announced
Rogers v. Guarantee Trust Co., 288
U.S. 123, 53 S.Ct. 295, 77 L.Ed. 652 (1933),
cases involving the internal affairs of a
corporation should be decided only in the
corporation's home state. Under Rogers,
when "considerations of convenience,
efficiency and justice point to the courts
of the state of the corporate domicile as
appropriate tribunals for the determination
of the particular case," the home state
should be the forum. Id. at 130-31,
53 S.Ct. at 297-98.
As to choice of law, it is true
that a New York State Court, and hence a
Federal Court sitting in the State of New
York, must apply the law of the state of
incorporation in deciding a case involving
the "internal affairs" of a foreign
corporation.
See Hart v. General Motors Corp., 129
A.D.2d 179, 517 N.Y.S.2d 490, 493 (A.D.,
1st Dept. 1987).
Page 428
However, recent New York case law
shows that decisions as to whether to
exercise jurisdiction over such cases are
made on essentially the same basis as a
forum non conveniens determination, and the
internal affairs rule is sometimes
considered merely an element of forum non
conveniens.
See Hart v. General Motors Corp., 517
N.Y.S.2d at 494;
Broida v. Bancroft, 103 A.D.2d 88,
478 N.Y.S.2d 333, 335 (A.D., 2d Dept.
1984);
Mantei v. Creole Petroleum Corp., 61
A.D.2d 910, 402 N.Y.S.2d 822, 823 (A.D.,
1st Dept. 1978).
This approach is based on the
United States Supreme Court's decision in
Koster v. Lumbermen's Mutual Co., 330
U.S. 518, 67 S.Ct. 828, 91 L.Ed. 1067
(1947), which suggests that Justice Stone's
dissent
Rogers v. Guarantee Trust Co., 288
U.S. at 145, 53 S.Ct. at 303, sets forth
a good dividing line as to which internal
affairs of a corporation should be decided
only in their home state, that is, those
affairs that involve questions of
administration of the corporation's
affairs.
Broida v. Bancroft, 478 N.Y.S.2d at
335.
As Judge Weinfeld has noted:
"Although there is no rigid generalized rule
as to what constitutes `internal affairs'
for this purpose, courts have declined
jurisdiction where a decision would affect
corporate structure or policy, but have
retained jurisdiction over cases involving
breach of fiduciary duty, fraud, or
contracts."
Prescott v. Plant Industries, Inc.,
88 F.R.D. 257, 261 (S.D.N.Y.1980).
We turn then to the issues
relating to lack of standing, ripeness and
the existence of a case or controversy. The
Plaintiff alleges that it has owned shares
of Federated since October 28, 1987. With
respect to this aspect of the issue, the
Defendants claim that the case should be
dismissed because Plaintiff did not own
shares at all times relevant to all of its
allegations of breach of fiduciary duty.
We note that Plaintiff alleges a
continuing wrong with respect to at least
the existence of the so-called "Poison
Pill." (The parties will understand that I
use that as a shorthand and do not intend by
the use of that now well-accepted term to
indicate any views on the merits of their
contention that it is appropriately labeled
as a "poison pill.") Thus, we will not
dismiss the claim on this basis, because of
the allegation of continuing wrong.
Defendant also claims that
Plaintiff can only bring a suit of this
nature as a shareholders' derivative suit.
We believe that our decision on standing,
which I am about to announce, fully disposes
of this objection.
The tender offer contains a
disclaimer of present financial ability to
consummate the proposed offer. Plaintiff has
presented affidavits from Kenneth Colburn, a
Managing Director of First Boston, which is
acting as financial advisor to CRTF and as
dealer manager in connection with its tender
offer, alleging that he believes "that the
Poison Pill and the Delaware Bill [since
enacted into law] are an immediate and
substantial impediment to CRTF's ability to
secure the financing necessary for the
offer." Affidavit of Kenneth H. Colburn, in
Opposition to Defendant's Motion to Dismiss,
dated February 1, 1988, at 3. Mr. Colburn
also alleges that, in order to obtain
commitments for the more than $4 billion
needed at the offering price of $47 per
share, CRTF would have to pay in excess of
$20 million. Id. at 6.
Plaintiff has not alleged the
existence of any committed financing nor of
any statement by First Boston that the
latter is "highly confident" that, in the
absence of the Poison Pill and the Delaware
legislation, it would be able to arrange the
level of financing called for to effect the
tender offer. Indeed, as noted, the tender
offer contains disclaimers and conditions
with respect to ability to finance.
Typically, an initial tender
offer is regarded as a tentative opening
ploy, subject to revision with respect to
its terms and upward price adjustment. The
Court may judicially note that the financial
community, whose beliefs are reflected in
such matters as the price at which the stock
is traded, so regards the initial tender
offer. As the Court noted
Newmont Mining Corp. v. Pickens, 831
F.2d 1448, 1451 (9th
Page 429
Cir.1987): "The SEC has consistently
permitted amendments to tender offers and
has never regarded the original tender offer
statement as final." (citing 17
C.F.R. § 240.13d-2 (1975); 17 C.F.R. §
240.14d-6(d) (1987)).
It is indeed anomalous that the
world at large may recognize the
tentativeness of such an offer but that a
federal court, which generally deals only in
concrete, ripened controversies, can be
asked to lay aside all else and adjudicate
at breakneck speed serious constitutional
questions raised by such an offer.
The Ninth Circuit has recently
determined that a valid tender offer existed
under the Williams Act where a party had
made an offer as to which it had
approximately two-thirds committed financing
(approximately $2.1 billion), and a letter
from its dealer manager stating that the
dealer manager was "highly confident" that
it could arrange the remaining one-third
financing (approximately $1.1 billion).
Newmont Mining Corp., 831 F.2d at 1449.
This Court perceives the question
of whether a valid tender offer can be made
as implicating different considerations from
those presented by the question of whether
the making of a tender offer confers
standing to contest, for example, the
provisions adopted by a board of directors.
The considerations that impel an early
disclosure and issuance of a tender offer
are not necessarily the same considerations
that determine questions of standing.
We have been directed to no case
that specifically addresses the question of
whether the requirements of ripeness,
standing and existence of a case or
controversy are met, where a party making a
tender offer comes into federal court
seeking the invalidation of a poison pill
and of a takeover statute:
1) without any allegation of
committed financing; and
2) without any allegation that
"but for the existence of the poison pill
and of the takeover statute" the party's
dealer manager is "highly confident" that
financing would be forthcoming.
We believe that with respect to
the question of standing in the absence of
at least a "highly confident" representation
or its equivalent, this is a case of first
impression.
The Plaintiff claims that if it
were found not to have standing to bring
this suit, a Catch-22 situation would ensue.
Plaintiff claims that the purpose of the
allegedly invalid Poison Pill and the
allegedly unconstitutional takeover statute
that purpose being the chilling of hostile
tender offers would be fulfilled if
Plaintiff could not bring suit without a
show of financing. This is because the very
existence of the Pill and the statute are
impediments to that financing, according to
Plaintiff. Thus, Plaintiff alleges, it would
have no recourse, and the Pill and the
statute that Plaintiff claims are invalid
and unconstitutional would therefore have
their intended effect and would go
unchallenged. In response, Federated cites
examples of tender offers made in the recent
past in which firm financing has been in
place, conditional on the nullification of
anti-takeover provisions.
The SEC responded today to our
questions as to the threshold issues of
ripeness, standing and the existence of a
case or controversy. It is the Commission's
view that:
"[t]he substantial efforts and
expenditures necessary for a person to
commence a tender offer establish a
`personal stake' in the controversy
sufficient to satisfy that standing
requirement. Awaiting greater assurances of
financing will add little or nothing to
clarify the issues and can, instead, cause
substantial injury to the plaintiff."
SEC Amicus Curiae Brief, dated
February 10, 1988, at 2.
It is thus the position of the
SEC that compliance with the Williams Act
and submission of the filings required by
that Act are in and of themselves sufficient
to confer standing.
The SEC goes on to state in its
submission:
"A bidder such as CRTF, by the
time it commences a tender offer, has taken
significant steps and made major financial
Page 430
commitments in retaining, at a minimum,
attorneys and investment bankers (CRTF's
Offer indicates, at 29, that CRTF paid its
investment banker an initial fee of $1.5
million)."
Id. at 6 (footnotes
omitted).
The SEC also notes that in this
case, where the tender offer was for $4.3
billion, the initial nonrefundable fee paid
by CRTF in connection with its Schedule
14D-1 filing amounted to $850,336. Id.
at 7.
Some of the most relevant cases
as to the relationship between financing and
the ripeness/standing/case-or-controversy
issues involve challenges to allegedly
discriminatory zoning laws. These cases, on
which Plaintiff relies, support the
propositions that:
1) there need be no firm
financing commitment where an aspect of the
injury alleged is that the conduct or
statute complained of is to some extent
preventing the plaintiff from obtaining such
financing; and
2) there need be no assurance
that the project will go forward if the
Court grants the relief requested.
Arlington
Heights v. Metropolitan Housing Development
Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 261-262, 97 S.Ct.
555, 561, 50 L.Ed.2d 450 (1977), the
Supreme Court found that a developer had
standing to seek injunctive relief, stating:
"An injunction would not, of
course, guarantee that Lincoln Green will be
built. MHDC would still have to secure
financing, qualify for federal subsidies,
and carry through with construction. But all
housing developments are subject to some
extent to similar uncertainties. When a
project is as detailed and specific as
Lincoln Green, a court is not required to
engage in undue speculation as a predicate
for finding that the plaintiff has the
requisite personal stake in the controversy.
MHDC has shown an injury to itself that is
`likely to be redressed by a favorable
decision.'"
(citing
Simon v. Eastern Kentucky Welfare Rights
Org.,
426 U.S. 26, 38, 96 S.Ct. 1917, 1924,
48 L.Ed.2d 450 (1976)).
In that case, MHDC had entered
into a land purchase contract contingent
upon its securing rezoning, and it had spent
several thousand dollars on the plans for
Lincoln Green and on the studies submitted
to the Village in support of the petition
for rezoning. On these facts, the Court
considered inaccurate the argument that MHDC
had suffered no economic injury, and
reaffirmed that economic injury is not the
only kind of injury that can support a
plaintiff's standing. Id. 429 U.S. at
262-63, 97 S.Ct. at 561-62.
In another zoning case, where the
potential unavailability of federal funding
for the development was the basis for the
challenge to plaintiff's standing, the
Second Circuit found that while "those who
have absolutely no realistic financing
capability have no standing, ...
[i]ndeterminancy of financing alone ... is
not enough to dismiss such an action, since
the multitude of factors affecting ultimate
financing capability are too variable to
permit certainty in prediction."
Huntington Branch, NAACP v. Town of
Huntington, 689 F.2d 391, 394 (2d
Cir.1982), cert. denied, 460 U.S.
1069, 103 S.Ct. 1523, 75 L.Ed.2d 947 (1983).
The court continued: "Private
lenders, as well as government agencies,
will be understandably reluctant to make
sizable commitments for funds for projects
which violate zoning laws and which, at
best, cannot be started before years of
litigation are completed. In such
circumstances, dismissal of a complaint
because of a lack of committed financing may
well prevent any litigant from challenging a
zoning ordinance." Id.
Other cases are to the same
effect. Where, for example, a defendant city
had blocked the plaintiff developer's access
to state revenue bond funding, and where the
defendant challenged the suit on ripeness
grounds, the Eighth Circuit has recently
found that where the complaint alleged that
the city, "for a constitutionally
impermissible reason, has blocked the
plaintiff's access to public financing for
at least a year," the injury alleged was
"real, definite, and complete." Meadows
of West
Page 431
Memphis v. City of West Memphis,
Arkansas, 800 F.2d 212, 214 (1986).
One can distinguish the
exclusionary zoning cases, and the other
cases relied on by Plaintiff, from tender
offer cases for at least two significant
reasons. One relates to the different
context and motivation of the parties. Thus,
in Arlington Heights the Court noted:
"[The plaintiff's] interest in building
Lincoln Green stems not from a desire for
economic gain, but rather from an interest
in making suitable low-cost housing
available in areas where such housing is
scarce." 429 U.S. at 263, 97 S.Ct. at 562.
The point is not that civil
liberties plaintiffs enjoy any privileged
status with respect to standing. The point
is that an expanding view of standing in
cases such as Arlington Heights does
not present the danger of litigation
initiated for improper economic reasons. To
put the matter colloquially, greenmailers
and strike suiters, that is, those who would
seek to initiate litigation not for the
purpose of obtaining their professed
objectives but to embarrass management in
the hopes of being bought off, are not
likely to bring suits to challenge
exclusionary zoning.
A second consideration is that in
cases such as Arlington Heights, the
suits before the court often constitute the
sole means for judicial determination of the
issues presented. Here, however, clearly
appropriate means of raising these
challenges are available: for example,
stockholders' derivative suits. Indeed, such
suits are pending, challenging the same
provisions as are challenged in this action.
We recognize CRTF's contention that the
interests of the plaintiffs in those suits
differ from and are sometimes adverse to
CRTF's interests, and we believe that that
point has force. The Court is noting only
that, unlike in some zoning cases, here a
denial of standing to Plaintiff will not
preclude all judicial review.
The Supreme Court has told us
Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 498,
95 S.Ct. 2197, 2205, 45 L.Ed.2d 343 (1974),
that: "In essence the question of standing
... involves both constitutional limitations
on federal court jurisdiction and prudential
limitations on its exercise."
We consider both aspects of the
question. Here the balance must be struck
between a requirement of firm financial
commitment, which would in this Court's
opinion be a too stringent and preclusive
requisite to standing, and the allowance of
standing to anyone who for any reason and
with no realistic financial capacity seeks
the invalidation of corporate bylaws or of
takeover statutes. We believe that the
striking of this balance requires the Court
to determine whether the tender offer is
made in good faith and is realistic. In
making these determinations, the Court is
free to consider all of the facts and
circumstances attendant upon the offer.
The SEC urges that the mere
making of a tender offer in compliance with
the Williams Act suffices to confer
standing. The Commission states in footnote
8 on page 6 of its brief: "We are not
addressing the situation, not presented
here, where a person makes a sham tender
offer, such as the offer made for J.J.
Newberry & Co., described in SEC Litigation
Release No. 3741 (June 2, 1967)."
Having received this brief from
the SEC but a few hours ago, I have not had
the opportunity to look into J.J. Newberry &
Co. and to learn what it is that the SEC
means when it refers to a "sham tender
offer." Nor have I had the opportunity to
determine whether there is any difference
between what the SEC would call a "sham
tender offer" and what the Court has
referred to as one "which is not made in
good faith, with a realistic prognosis for
obtaining the requisite financing."
Assuming arguendo, contrary to
the Commission's position, that the mere
making of the tender offer in compliance
with the Williams Act is not enough, the
Court should and does here consider all the
facts and circumstances in determining
whether this is a good faith, realistic
offer. Among other things, the Court may
consider the past experience of the offeror,
if there has been any. Here, this factor
tilts decidedly in favor of the Plaintiff,
whose principals have recently consummated
the takeover of
Page 432
Allied Stores, a major corporation
engaged in the same business activities as
Federated.
Further, the Court may consider
the financial and other resources available
to the offeror, and in that regard there has
been filed with the Court today a copy of
the release issued by the Plaintiff
yesterday as to the funding that has become
available to it. That release appears as
Exhibit D to the Affidavit of Frederick A.O.
Schwarz, Jr., Attorney for CRTF, dated
February 11, 1988. It states: "Campeau
Corporation announced today that it was
renewing its offer to enter into a
definitive agreement with Federated
Department Stores, providing for Federated's
stockholders to receive $61 in cash per
share. In that connection, Campeau
Corporation confirmed that it has arranged
the required equity financing for the
transaction." The release goes on to state
the sources of that equity financing, which
include a $400 million loan, and an
agreement by another party to purchase $260
million of equity securities of Campeau
Corporation. This of course provides far
less than the over $5 billion required to
consummate the tender offer, but it is
certainly a substantial sum of money.
With respect to the availability
of financial resources, the Court also
considers the factors cited by the SEC in
its memorandum, and the fact that Plaintiff
has retained financial advisors and managers
who are experienced in comparable
transactions and who have access to
appropriate funding sources.
The Court may also consider the
extent of the investment made by the offeror
in incurring the expenses attendant upon the
offer, some of which have been noted by the
SEC in its submission. These may include the
cost of compliance with federal (and
possibly state) statutes, regulations and
filing fees, the cost of legal and financial
advisors, and the cost of obtaining
contingent financing.
We note that, although Federated
has challenged standing based on the absence
of financial commitment, it does not
otherwise challenge the good faith of the
offer. There is no suggestion in this case
that the offer has been made or the expenses
incurred to achieve any other purpose than
the ultimate purchase of Federated, as set
forth in the offer.
Based on all of these
considerations, we are of the view that the
Plaintiff has made a sufficient showing of
standing to warrant our allowing the case to
go forward to its next procedural stage.
Hence, we deny the motion to dismiss for
lack of standing, ripeness, and existence of
a case or controversy based on the absence
of financial commitments at this time,
without prejudice to Federated's right to
renew this claim if, at the time of the
hearing on the merits of the application for
a preliminary injunction, such renewal seems
appropriate.
Further, we note that in
determining on the merits the question of
issuance of a preliminary injunction, if the
Court is called upon to engage in a
balancing of the equities for purposes of
determining the appropriateness of issuing a
preliminary injunction, the question of
Plaintiff's ability to finance would of
course again enter the equation.
For the reasons set forth above,
Federated's motion to dismiss the complaint
is denied.
OPINION OF MARCH 18, 1988
(PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION)
We know from one of Judge
Longobardi's opinions in Black & Decker
v. American Standard that he was in the
process of announcing an Opinion, when he
was handed an envelope telling of another
bid. So before we proceed any further, I
suppose I should inquire whether there have
been any developments during the course of
the day of which I should be apprised.
Silence would indicate a
negative.
We will deal with two of the many
issues raised in the several motions pending
before the Court. We recognize that there
are issues with which we have not yet dealt
but in view of the obvious need for prompt
adjudication, we announce at this time our
rulings with respect to: I) CRTF's motion
for a preliminary injunction with respect to
Page 433
the Federated "Poison Pill," and II) the
expiration date of the CRTF tender offer.
I. THE "POISON PILL"
On January 25, 1988, CRTF Corp.
("CRTF"), a New York subsidiary of Campeau
Corp., commenced a cash tender offer for all
shares of Federated Department Stores, Inc.
("Federated"). That same day, CRTF filed
suit in the Southern District of New York,
moving for a preliminary injunction against
Federated and some of its officers and
directors, claiming that the directors had
breached their fiduciary duty in adopting a
Rights Plan, dubbed by Plaintiff and
sometimes referred to herein as a "Poison
Pill", and in refusing to redeem the Rights
in the face of Plaintiff's tender offer.
Defendants promptly moved to dismiss, and
that motion was denied on February 11.
Plaintiff's complaint also
alleged violation of the federal securities
law, and was once amended to add a challenge
to the newly enacted Delaware takeover
statute. Plaintiff has now dropped as moot
its challenge to the Delaware statute,
stating that the changed circumstances of
the case make the statute inapplicable here.
Plaintiff claims that the Rights
Plan is inherently invalid, but that even if
the Court finds it valid on its face, it
should find it invalid as applied. Plaintiff
claims irreparable harm in that the
existence of the Rights Plan is making it
more difficult to get the firm financing
that Federated urges is lacking in CRTF's
proposal. CRTF further alleges irreparable
harm in the dilution of shares it would
possess, due to the effect of the Rights
Plan, if its tender offer were to go through
without the Board's approval.
CRTF claims that it will be
illegally prevented from consummating its
tender offer by the illegitimate actions of
Federated's Board of Directors unless the
Rights Plan is invalidated or the Board
redeems the Rights with respect to CRTF's
offer. The Federated Board has, at this
point, agreed to redeem the Rights with
respect to a competing offer from R.H. Macy
& Co. ("Macy's"), with whom Federated has
entered into a contract, and Macy's has
agreed that the Rights may be redeemed with
respect to other offers as long as the
company's shareholders have been provided
with a full and fair opportunity to consider
and act upon such other offers.
The parties are in agreement that
an "auction" of the sort described
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings,
506 A.2d 173 (Del.1986) is
now underway. CRTF charges that the
continued existence of the Rights Plan in
the midst of such an auction usurps to
management the prerogative of deciding
whether the Offer may be considered by the
shareholders. Federated responds that the
Plan is still necessary, both as a means of
fending off coercive tender offers (and it
claims that CRTF's offer is such a coercive
offer), and as a tool for increasing the
bidding (which it asserts is ongoing).
We must recognize the procedural
context in which this matter is before the
Court. This is a motion for a preliminary
injunction. The standards for granting a
preliminary injunction are well recognized.
Plaintiff must show the existence of (a)
irreparable harm and (b) either (1) a
probability of success on the merits, or (2)
both a fair ground for litigation and the
balance of hardships tilting in its favor.
See Hanson Trust PLC v. M.L. SCM
Acquisition, Inc., 781 F.2d 264, 273 (2d
Cir.1986). It must be borne in mind that we
are dealing in that procedural context and
only in that procedural context.
For the purposes of this motion,
we will assume the existence of irreparable
harm to the Plaintiff.
Chronology
Plaintiff's original tender offer
was for $47.00 per share for all shares, and
was conditioned upon several things,
including:
1) approval of the offer by the
Board of Directors;
2) the invalidation of the Rights
Plan, or the redemption of the Rights by the
Board;
3) the absence or inapplicability
of valid legislation that would materially
limit
Page 434
its ability to consummate a second-step
merger; and
4) CRTF's obtaining sufficient
financing.
At the time of the initial offer,
Plaintiff had no committed financing, and no
letter from First Boston (CRTF's financial
advisor/dealer manager) stating that the
latter was "highly confident" that such
financing could be arranged. The original
offer was due to expire on February 22.
Federated immediately decried the
offer as "grossly inadequate," and also
questioned CRTF's ability to obtain
financing. Following the initial tender
offer, CRTF sought to convince the Federated
Board to enter into a friendly merger, and
raised its per share offer several times.
Once the offer reached the mid-$60 range,
Federated no longer appeared to consider the
offer "grossly inadequate." However,
Federated for some time spurned CRTF's
advances on the grounds that CRTF had not
made a sufficient showing of ability to
finance the transaction.
Federated simultaneously sought
alternative solutions, such as a possible
restructuring plan, and competing bids for
all or part of Federated. See
Declaration of Howard W. Johnson, Director
of Federated Department Stores, in
Opposition to Motion, dated March 11, 1988,
at 2-3; Federated Press Release, dated
February 16, 1988, attached to Affidavit of
Stuart L. Shapiro, Attorney for Federated,
dated February 17, 1988, as Exhibit A.
Federated said it would consider a CRTF
offer if and when it was convinced that CRTF
had sufficient financing. CRTF pointed out
that it could more easily obtain financing
commitments for a friendly merger than for
an unfriendly takeover attempt.
On February 26, Federated and
CRTF issued a joint press release stating
that they were negotiating a merger at $68
per share, still for all shares. The parties
asked the Court to refrain from ruling on
the preliminary injunction at that time in
view of the negotiations.
Over the weekend of February
27-28, the parties apparently came very
close to a final agreement. On February 29,
however, Federated issued a press release
announcing that it would also consider
another proposal "which appear[ed]
competitive" with CRTF's offer. Federated
Press Release, dated February 29, 1988,
Plaintiff's Exhibit 77, at Tab 42. Later
that day it made public the terms of this
proposal. R.H. Macy & Co. had offered to
make a two-tiered tender offer for
approximately 80% of Federated shares at
$73.80 per share, to be followed by a merger
in which the remaining 20% of Federated
shares would be exchanged for about 40% of a
new Macy's/Federated entity.
Faced with this competing offer,
CRTF representatives on March 1 entered into
discussions with Federated as to the
possibility of CRTF's raising its offer to
$69.50 upon the satisfaction of certain
conditions. No such offer, however, was ever
finalized. That same day, both before and
after the discussions with CRTF as to the
possible $69.50 offer, the Federated Board
received presentations from its financial
advisors, including Goldman, Sachs & Co.,
Shearson Lehman Hutton, Inc., and Hellman &
Friedman, as to the relative merits of the
Macy's and the CRTF offers. During the
course of the day, Macy's offer was raised
to $74.50 for the first tier.
Goldman, Sachs advised the Board
that the near-term trading values of the two
offers were "roughly comparable," and that
the blended value of the Macy's transaction
would be in the neighborhood of $70 to $80,
given certain assumptions. Declaration of
Howard A. Silverstein, General Partner of
Goldman, Sachs & Co., in Opposition to
Motion, dated March 13, 1988, at 3-5.
Shearson Lehman opined that in
the near term Macy's offer was roughly
comparable to the CRTF offer, and that there
was "a reasonable basis for concluding that
Macy's offer presented a superior
transaction for Federated stockholders
because of the long-term values inherent in
it." Declaration of James A. Stern, Managing
Director of Shearson Lehman Hutton Inc., in
Opposition to Motion, dated March 12, 1988,
at 6.
Page 435
Hellman & Friedman informed the
Board that it believed "there was a
reasonable basis on which the Federated
Board could make a judgment that the offer
presented by Macy's was superior to the
offer presented by [CRTF], even assuming the
[CRTF] offer would be increased to $69.50
per share." Affidavit of Tully M. Friedman,
General Partner of Hellman & Friedman, in
Opposition to the Motion, dated March 11,
1988.
The outside directors at the
meeting separately and unanimously decided
that Macy's offer was superior to CRTF's,
and the Board as a whole unanimously agreed.
Declaration of Reginald H. Jones, Outside
Director of Federated Department Stores, in
Opposition to Motion, dated March 11, 1988,
at 6-7. Then, on March 2, Federated and
Macy's jointly announced that a definitive
agreement had been signed and approved by
the Boards of Directors of both companies.
CRTF responded that same day with
what has been characterized by Macy's and
Federated as a "new" offer, and by CRTF
itself as an "amended" offer. The
distinction is relevant with respect to the
number of days the offer must be kept open
under SEC regulations, and we will deal with
that aspect of the case in Part II of this
Opinion. This was a two-tiered, all-cash
offer for approximately 80% of the stock at
$75, with the remaining 20% of the stock to
be purchased at $44 at the time of the
merger. The "blended value" of this offer is
said to be $68 per share.
CRTF then set March 15 as the
date of expiration of the offer, and on
March 8 renewed its application for a
preliminary injunction against the Federated
Rights Plan. A hearing was set for March 14.
On March 14, Macy's amended its
offer, raising the price to be paid in the
first stage of the offer to $77.35, and
lowering the percentage of Macy's/Federated
stock that would be exchanged in the second
stage to 36% from the original 40%.
Affidavit of Howard Goldfeder, Chairman of
the Board and C.E.O. of Federated Department
Stores, in Opposition to Motion, dated March
14, 1988, at 3. Federated claims that its
investment bankers advised the Board that
the new proposal is worth between $110 and
$200 million more in the near term than
Macy's original offer. Id. at 5.
When asked by the Court, at a
hearing on March 14, whether CRTF had made
its final offer, counsel for CRTF stated
that it had indeed made the last offer that
would be made in advance of the decision on
the Poison Pill. Counsel did not, however,
represent that CRTF had made its final offer
in the bidding, even assuming no further
bidding by Macy's. In fact, when the Court,
in questioning Counsel about the expiration
date of the offer, mentioned the possibility
that Plaintiff could withdraw its offer,
Counsel stated emphatically: "But we are not
going to do that.... I am quite confident
from having seen the determination of the
businessmen and their advisors that they
intend to press and press to get this
company." Transcript, March 14, 1988, at 37.
While CRTF moves only for a
preliminary injunction against the use of
the Poison Pill itself, it also protests
that Federated has granted certain
advantages to Macy's as a "white knight"
that it has unfairly denied CRTF as a
hostile bidder. For example, it claims that
Federated refused to provide CRTF with
financial projections that it gave to
Macy's. Federated replies that the sole
reason CRTF was denied this information is
that CRTF refused to sign a confidentiality
agreement, while Macy's signed it. Goldfeder
Affidavit, supra, at 7.
CRTF also complains that the
Federated Board has agreed to severe
restrictions on its ability to waive the
"Poison Pill" with respect to competing
offers. While Macy's had originally
extracted greater restrictions on
Federated's discretion to act under the
Rights Plan, Macy's has now agreed that
Federated may take any action under the
Plan, including the redemption of Rights, if
"in the judgment of the Board, the Company's
shareholders have been provided with a full
and fair opportunity to consider and act
with respect to any competing
Page 436
offer to acquire shares of the company."
Goldfeder Affidavit, supra, at 4.
CRTF further protests that some
provisions of the contract between Federated
and Macy's are designed to deter competing
bids. As of this time, Federated has agreed
to provide Macy's with the following
benefits if Macy's does not succeed in its
battle to acquire Federated: 1) a "break-up"
fee of up to $45 million for expenses
incurred by Macy's with respect to this
transaction; 2) a "topping" fee of 25% of
consideration received in excess of $77.35
per share from another acquiror; and 3) a
"lock up" of two divisions of Federated,
which would be sold to Macy's at fair market
value. Federated has also signed an
agreement that CRTF describes as a "no shop"
and that Federated describes as a "window
shop" agreement. CRTF tells us that it is
deferring action as to any of these
agreements, which it describes as unlawful,
at this time, preferring now to resolve only
"the more pressing problem of the Poison
Pill." CRTF does, however, ask that the
Court require Federated to release
PaineWebber from an agreement in which the
latter had promised not to participate in
the financing of a CRTF offer unless
Federated agreed to such participation.
CRTF also alleges that actions by
Federated's Board in this matter are tainted
by certain aspects of the agreement with
Macy's. Specifically, Federated is to be
allowed to designated 40% of the Board of
Directors of the new Macy's/Federated
entity, and certain Federated insiders were
to receive the blended value of their stock
options in cash.
Federated's counsel represents,
and the Court agrees, that it is normal in a
merger for the merging corporations to
designate members of the new Board of
Directors proportionate to their interest in
the new corporation. The new corporation
will be owned 58% by former Macy's
shareholders, 36% by former Federated
shareholders, and 6% of the equity will be
"reserved for issuance upon conversion of
new convertible debt securities which Macy's
[will] place privately in connection with
financing the tender offer." Goldfeder
Affidavit, supra, at 3. We see no
conflict of interest on the basis of the
designation of the new Board.
As to the payment of cash for the
options, Macy's and Federated have now
agreed that the directors will receive for
their deferred stock credits and their stock
options "as near as practicable the same
proportion of cash and stock of the combined
entity as that being offered to Federated's
public stockholders." Affidavit of Boris
Auerbach, Vice President and Secretary of
Federated Department Stores, in Opposition
to Motion, dated March 16, 1988, at 6 and 7.
Thus, we do not find that CRTF has a
likelihood of success in showing divided
loyalty on the part of the directors based
upon this provision of the Macy's contract.
Directors' Duties under Delaware
Law
Corporate directors have
fiduciary duties of loyalty to the
corporation, and of due care in the
administration of corporate affairs. See
Revlon, 506 A.2d at 179 (citing
Guth v. Loft, Inc.,
23 Del.Ch. 255, 5 A.2d 503, 510 (1939).
Under the business judgment rule, where a
board of directors is found to have acted in
good faith, a court will not try to
substitute its judgment for that of the
board, and will uphold the board's decisions
as long as they are attributable "to any
rational business purpose."
Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co.,
493 A.2d 946, 954 (Del.1985) (citing
Sinclair Oil Corp. v. Levien, 280
A.2d 717, 720 (Del.1971)). Under
Delaware law, the business judgment rule ("a
presumption that in making a business
decision the directors of a corporation
acted on an informed basis, in good faith
and in the honest belief that the action
taken was in the best interests of the
company") applies in the context of
takeovers. Id. (citing
Aronson v. Lewis, 473 A.2d 805, 812
(Del.1984)). This is true despite the
inherent potential conflict of interests
that exists when a Board is in the position
of deciding whether and how to defend
against a takeover attempt.
To deal with this potential
conflict, the Delaware Supreme Court has
announced
Page 437
an enhanced duty on the part of directors
in this position. Id. at 955. The
directors carry this burden by showing good
faith and reasonable investigation, and that
the defensive mechanism was reasonable in
relation to the threat posed. Id.
To determine whether a Board of
Directors has violated its fiduciary duty to
its shareholders in enacting or taking
actions under a challenged "Poison Pill"
Rights Plan, a court must examine the
motivations of the Board as it made its
decisions, from the initiation of the plan
through any actions taken under it (Moran
v. Household Int'l, Inc., 500 A.2d 1346,
1356 (Del.1985) (citing Unocal, 493
A.2d at 955)); it must consider whether the
Board made an "informed" decision based on
reasonable investigation, considered under a
standard of gross negligence (id. (citing
Smith v. Van Gorkom,
488 A.2d 858, 873 (Del.1985))), or
perhaps of "reasonable diligence" (Hanson
Trust PLC v. ML SCM Acquisition, 781
F.2d 264, 274, 275 (interpreting New
York law, and citing
Treadway Cos. Inc. v. Care Corp.,
638 F.2d 357, 384 (2d Cir.1980), which
interprets New Jersey law)); and it must
evaluate the reasonableness of the Board's
actions as a response to any given threats
it perceives to the company (Moran,
500 A.2d at 1356).
The approval of any defensive
measures by a Board composed of a majority
of outside independent directors acting in
good faith and upon reasonable investigation
"materially enhance[s]" the proof that the
Board has acted reasonably in response to
the threat posed. Moran, 500 A.2d at
1356 (quoting Unocal, 493 A.2d at
955). If the directors succeed in making
this showing, "the burden shifts back to the
Plaintiffs, who have the ultimate burden of
persuasion to show a breach of the
directors' fiduciary duties." Id.
In an "auction" situation, "the
directors' role remains an active one,
changed only in the respect that they are
charged with the duty of selling the company
at the highest price attainable for the
stockholders' benefit." Revlon, 506
A.2d at 184 n. 16. The directors'
responsibility in carrying out their
fiduciary duty becomes "the maximization of
the company's value at a sale for the
stockholders' benefit." Id. at 182.
Development of The Rights Plan or
So-Called "Poison Pill"
Federated Department Stores
adopted a Rights Plan on January 23, 1986
(and amended it in 1987 and 1988 with
respect to the percentages required to
establish "triggering events" as described
below). On that date the Board declared a
dividend of one Right for each outstanding
share of common stock. Initially, the Rights
are transferrable only with the common stock
and are not exercisable. However, upon the
occurrence of any one of the following
triggering events, separate Rights
certificates would be issued on a
"Distribution Date" that was the earlier of:
(i) 10 days after a person or
group (the "Acquiring Person") either
acquires 20% or more of Federated shares, or
(ii) 10 business days after an
Acquiring Person commences a tender offer
that would result in the Acquiring Person's
owning 30% or more of Federated's shares, or
(iii) 10 business days after the
Directors determine that a 15%-stockholder
is an "Adverse Person" as defined in the
Plan.
As of the Distribution Date, a
holder of a Right could buy a share of
Federated Preferred Stock at a very
disadvantageous price (a disincentive to the
shareholder's using the Right in that way).
Once distributed, the Rights can be redeemed
by the Board at a price of $.05 each. If the
Rights are not redeemed by the Board, each
Right would entitle its holder, except the
Acquiring Person, to purchase common stock
of Federated (the "flip-in" right) or of the
Acquiring Person (the "flip-over" right)
with a value equal to twice the exercise
price of the Right (e.g., $500 worth
of stock for an exercise price of $250). The
flip-in is also triggered if:
(i) Federated is the surviving
corporation in a merger or other business
combination with the Acquiring Person, or
Page 438
(ii) the Acquiring Person engages
in a self-dealing transaction, as defined in
the Plan.
The flip-over is triggered if:
(i) Federated is not the
surviving corporation in a merger or other
business combination, or
(ii) 50% of Federated's earning
power or assets are sold.
Affidavit of G. William Miller,
Director of Federated Department Stores,
Inc., in Opposition to Motion, February 16,
1988, at 3-8.
Under such a Plan, if the Board
perceives a potential acquiror as posing a
threat to the corporation, it can refrain
from redeeming the Rights, resulting in the
dilution of the shares owned by that party.
Thus the Board can use its power to redeem
Rights as leverage in dealing with a
potential acquiror. In a tender offer
situation, for example, the Board can seek
improvements in price and financing
arrangements, and can seek competing bids.
As Plaintiff CRTF points out, however, the
existence of such a Plan also creates the
opportunity for management entrenchment.
As to the actions and motivations
of the Board over the course of development
of the Plan and in response to the CRTF
tender offer and merger offers, as noted
above, the Board has the burden of showing
good faith and reasonable investigation.
Unocal, 493 A.2d at 954.
According to G. William Miller, a
director of Federated, the Board undertook
to create the Plan not in the face of any
specific takeover attempt, but because of
concern "that the Company might be subjected
to a number of coercive tactics which had
become common in contests for corporate
control." Miller Affidavit, supra, at
10. The Miller Affidavit further states that
"the Board sought professional advice as to
how to forestall such coercive tactics
without preventing offers the Board might
consider favorable." Id. at 12-13.
Where a defensive mechanism was adopted to
ward off possible future advances rather
than in reaction to a specific threat, the
Delaware Court has found that "in reviewing
a preplanned defensive mechanism it seems
even more appropriate to apply the business
judgment rule." Moran, 500 A.2d at
1350. We think that, in a final decision on
the merits, a court would likely apply the
business judgment rule in considering the
validity of the Plan as originally adopted.
The Plan was amended twice, the
first time apparently again merely as a
preplanned defense mechanism, and the second
time in response to a specific perceived
threat. See Miller Affidavit,
supra, at 16-18. The most significant
aspect of the first amendment, adopted
September 18, 1987, was that it lowered the
"flip-in trigger" from 50% to 30%. This was
done "in recognition that effective control
of a corporation could pass as a result of a
30 percent or more stock acquisition."
Id. at 18. Mr. Miller asserts that the
second amendment, adopted on January 21,
1988, was a response to Donald J. Trump's
announcement of his intention to acquire 15%
or more of Federated. Mr. Miller states:
"There was concern expressed that
Mr. Trump might attempt to extract
green-mail from Federated or that he might
seek to use a position in Federated stock,
or the threat of an accumulation of stock,
to aid his real estate negotiations [ongoing
with Federated]. There was also a concern
that Federated stock price had become
under-valued in the wake of the October 19,
1987 stock market crash."
Id. This later amendment
provided that the triggering amount would be
reduced to 15% from 30% if, but only if, the
Acquiring Person were determined to be an
"Adverse Person," defined in the amendment
as posing certain specific types of
potential harm to the corporation. Id.
at 18-19.
Plaintiff alleges that the
directors breached their fiduciary duty to
their shareholders in taking these defensive
measures. Plaintiff's expert witness
suggests that the original Plan was adopted
"in apparent response to reports in the
financial press of an impending takeover
attempt," but alleges no personal knowledge.
Affidavit of John C. Coffee, Jr., Professor
of Law at Columbia University, in Support of
Motion, dated February 16,
Page 439
1988, at 7. Plaintiff charges that Mr.
Miller's allegations about Mr. Trump's
interest are suspect because, in a press
release issued at the time of the amendment
Federated stated that it "wasn't aware of
any accumulation of its stock, but was
taking action `to discourage any such
activity.'" Associated Press Release dated
January 22, 1988, Plaintiff's Exhibit at Tab
4. At oral argument, Plaintiff suggested
with respect to Federated's January 21, 1988
press release, which Plaintiff claims was
false and misleading, that Federated may
well have been expecting CRTF's tender
offer. Transcript, January 28, 1988, at
30-31.
Despite CRTF's allegations,2
we do not find that CRTF has a likelihood of
success on this issue. That is, we do not
believe CRTF will succeed in showing a
breach of duty in the adoption of the Plan
or the amendments, which appear to have been
reasonable in response to the threats we
believe were posed to the corporation at the
time they were adopted.
It is the opinion of the Court
that Plaintiff will be unable to establish
that the Federated Plan is, in and of
itself, invalid. The "Poison Pill" includes
no price barrier to discourage offers below
a perhaps artificially high trigger price as
was the case
Dynamics Corp. of America v. CTS Corp.,
805 F.2d 705 (7th Cir.1986), and
Buckhorn Inc. v. Ropak Corp.,
656 F.Supp. 209 (S.D.Ohio), aff'd mem.,
815 F.2d 76 (6th Cir.1987). It provides the
directors with a shield to fend off coercive
offers, and with a gavel to run an auction.
As the facts have shown, it is not a "show
stopper." In fact it was clearly a factor in
the Board's ability to obtain improvements
in the price and financing arrangements
offered by CRTF even before the advent of
the Macy's offer, as discussed below, and to
seek competitive bids from third parties,
and to obtain the Macy's bid. Cf. Revlon,
506 A.2d at 181 ("[T]he Plan was a factor in
causing Pantry Pride to raise its bids from
a low of $42 to an eventual high of $58.").
As the Delaware Supreme Court
found in upholding a "flip-over" rights
plan:
"The Rights Plan is not absolute.
When the [Board] is faced with a tender
offer and a request to redeem the rights,
they will not be able to arbitrarily reject
the offer. They will be held to the same
fiduciary standards any other board of
directors would be held to in deciding to
adopt a defensive mechanism."
Moran, 500 A.2d at 1354.
Redemption of the Rights
CRTF claims that, even if the
pill is not invalid on its face, it is a
breach of fiduciary duty for the Board to
refrain from redeeming the Rights and
dropping all other defensive measures once a
Revlon-type auction is underway. CRTF
also asserts that certain of the favorable
conditions granted to Macy's in the
agreement between Federated and Macy's are
impermissible in that they favor one bidder
over another in an auction situation.
CRTF cites language from
Revlon that it interprets as requiring a
target Board to drop all defensive measures,
including Poison Pills, when bidders make
relatively similar offers, or when
dissolution of the company becomes
inevitable. Revlon, 506 A.2d at 184
("Favoritism for a white knight to the total
exclusion of a hostile bidder might be
justifiable when the latter's offer
adversely affects shareholder interest, but
when bidders make relatively similar offers,
or dissolution of the company becomes
inevitable, the directors cannot fulfill
their enhanced Unocal duties by
playing favorites with the contending
factions."). Plaintiff asserts that the
existence of either condition would suffice
to require the dismantling of the pill, and
that in fact both conditions are present
here. In Plaintiff's preferred scenario, the
shareholders should simply be given the
offer and any information the Board may wish
to provide as to the value of the company
and as to its view of competing offers, and
allowed to decide for themselves whether
they wish to sell at the price offered.
Page 440
Federated replies that the
raison d'etre of its Rights Plan is to
protect shareholders against just such
coercive tactics as CRTF is engaged in here.
Federated also points to several possible
results that might follow upon its
redemption of rights other than in the
context of a binding deal. The first is that
CRTF could drop its offer and "sweep the
street"3 to
acquire a controlling block of Federated
stock, without having taken on any
obligations to existing Federated
shareholders (as Federated alleges Campeau,
CRTF's parent company, did in its takeover
of Allied Stores Corp. in 1986). Also, if
Federated were to redeem the Rights other
than as an element of a binding deal, third
parties could seek to defeat the more
beneficial proposal through a street sweep
or a front-end loaded offer.
CRTF claims that its two-tiered
offer is not intended to be coercive, but
was required in order to make the CRTF offer
as comparable as possible to the Macy's
offer. It asserts that the danger was that
investors would tender into a $74.50 offer
for 80% of the shares rather than into a $68
offer for 100% of the shares, even if the
latter was a more beneficial offer overall.
While there might have been some
substance to this explanation if the offers
were due to expire on the same date, the
fact that CRTF's offer was due to expire
well before Macy's offer renders this
explanation rather unpersuasive. It is the
opinion of the Court that, regardless of the
motivation, the principal consequence of the
change to a two-tiered, front-end loaded,
all cash offer is to coerce shareholders to
tender into the first stage offer at $75 to
avoid being left with shares worth only $44
in the subsequent merger.
It is clear that under Delaware
law a Board of Directors need not be a
passive observer. According to the Delaware
Court, concerns that may give rise to
reasonable defensive responses include
"inadequacy of the price offered, nature and
timing of the offer, questions of
illegality, the impact on `constituencies'
other than shareholders ..., the risk of
nonconsummation, and the quality of
securities being offered in the exchange."
Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955. A Board
clearly has the right to use its powers to
defeat a coercive, two-tiered, front-end
loaded bid with a timing advantage, where
the Board believes the offer would not be in
the interests of the shareholders.
We are taking into consideration
the fact that at all relevant times, from
the development of the Plan through the
present, the Federated Board of Directors
has consisted of a majority of outside
directors. See Miller Affidavit,
supra, at 14 and 17. As noted above,
this materially enhances the proof that the
Board was acting in good faith.
Thus far the Court has seen no
evidence sufficient to warrant the granting
of preliminary injunctive relief that the
Board of Federated has acted other than in
the best interests of the shareholders here.
The directors have solicited competing bids,
and have obtained one that they consider
more advantageous than the CRTF offer
currently on the table. They have stated
that they are willing to consider improved
offers from CRTF, and offers from still
other third parties, and their contract with
Macy's does not at this point in any way
preclude this. Even Plaintiff's expert
witness concedes that a Board's refusal to
redeem a "flip-in" rights plan is considered
a reasonable response under Revlon
where it is "designed to promote a
value-maximizing auction" and where the
Board "actively [seeks] to elicit a higher
bid." Coffee Affidavit, supra, at
13.
With respect to the benefits
bestowed upon Macy's, we note that lock-ups,
break-up fees, and window-shop provisions
are not illegal where they enhance rather
than stop the bidding. Such devices "may be
legitimately necessary to convince a `white
knight' to enter the bidding by providing
some form of compensation for the risks it
is undertaking." Samjens Partners
Page 441
I v. Burlington Industries, Inc., 663
F.Supp. 614, 624 (S.D.N.Y.1987). See
also Yanow v. Scientific Leasing (Del.
Chancery Court, February 8, 1988) (option to
purchase shares, expense reimbursement,
window shop, and management incentive and
compensation agreements upheld). However, we
note that such devices must be scrutinized
very carefully by a court called upon to
evaluate them. See Revlon, 506 A.2d
at 183-84; Black & Decker Corp. v.
American Standard, Inc., slip op. #
88-50 LON (D.Del., March 16, 1988).
We remind counsel for Federated
that decisions such as whether or not to
release PaineWebber from its agreement, and
to allow it to participate in CRTF's
financing, will also be scrutinized by the
Court in its ultimate review of the Board's
actions in conducting the auction.
[Epilogue: After the issuance of this
Opinion, Federated released PaineWebber and
another funding source from prior
contractual restrictions on their ability to
enter into financing agreements with CRTF.]
As noted above, CRTF claims that
Revlon requires that once an auction
has been set in motion, the target
corporation must drop all its defenses and
allow market forces to take over. We
believe, rather, that with respect to a
poison pill, the teachings of Revlon
require directors to enhance the bidding in
an auction as best they can.
The Delaware Court was troubled
in the Revlon case by its finding
that "the directors allowed considerations
other than the maximization of shareholder
profit to affect their judgment." Revlon,
506 A.2d at 185. It is true that some of the
Court's language in Revlon suggests
that defensive measures do become even more
suspect than is normally the case once the
offers are relatively similar or the
break-up of the company has become
inevitable. Nevertheless, the gist of the
opinion, echoed throughout, is that
directors must "sell[] the company at the
highest price attainable for the
stockholders' benefit." Id. at 184 n.
16. Thus we believe that language such as
"[m]arket forces must be allowed to operate
freely to bring the target's shareholders
the best price available for their equity" (id.
at 184) must be read to emphasize the goal
of the "best price available" rather than
the means of "market forces."
The Revlon court was
dealing with a situation in which it had
found:
"[T]he Revlon board ended the
auction in return for very little actual
improvement in the final bid. The principal
benefit went to the directors, who avoided
personal liability to a class of creditors
[noteholders] to whom the board owed no
further duty under the circumstances. Thus,
when a board ends an intense bidding contest
on an insubstantial basis, and where a
significant by-product of that action is to
protect the directors against a perceived
threat of personal liability for
consequences stemming from the adoption of
previous defense measures, the action cannot
withstand the enhanced scrutiny which
Unocal requires of director conduct."
Id. (citing Unocal,
493 A.2d at 954-55).
We see nothing at this point that
suggests that the Federated Board is acting
with any other motive than to enhance the
bidding and to raise the price for the
benefit of the shareholders. Thus, we do not
find that Plaintiff has, at this stage of
the record, demonstrated a likelihood of
success on the issue of the invalidity of
the pill as applied in this situation, that
is, on the continued invocation by the
Federated Board of the Rights Plan vis-a-vis
CRTF's present two-tiered bid.
We agree with and find persuasive
the claim of Federated's Board that the
auction is still in progress. The situation
appears to be highly fluid, with daily press
accounts of revised offers from each of the
bidders. Judicial intervention at this time
would therefore be unwarranted and
counter-productive.
This Court need not and does not
now decide what the legal rights and
liabilities of the parties will be if and
when the Board invokes the Rights Plan
against a bidder who declares unequivocally
that it has made its final offer (in the
absence of a still higher, later, competing
bid) but the Board waives the Plan with
respect to another
Page 442
allegedly lower bidder. We recognize
that, if a Court were to require an absolute
and unequivocal final offer, the moving
party's adversary could then attempt to top
that offer and thus be virtually assured of
making the final bid of the auction. Hence
we do not envision that the Court would hold
the first party to its "final offer" in such
a situation, but rather that it would
recognize that the auction is still in
progress, and would deny the application for
relief without prejudice to renewal when the
auction ends.
If the issue of selective
invocation of the Rights at the end of the
auction arises, the Court will be required
to scrutinize carefully the actions of the
Federated Board and any claims that the
decision to favor a particular bidder was
improperly influenced by any considerations
such as conflicts or insider preferences.
We wish to be clearly understood that we are
not now reaching these questions. We simply
decline to overrule the Board's
determination that the auction is still in
progress, especially in the absence of a
representation by CRTF both that it believes
its bid is the higher, and that, in the
absence of a still higher, later, competing
bid, it has made its highest and final bid.
Thus, our sole holding is that at this time
and on this record CRTF has not shown a
likelihood of success on its claim that it
is entitled to a preliminary injunction
against the Federated Board's continued
invocation of the Rights Plan with respect
to CRTF's present two-tiered bid.
Balance of Hardships
Because we do not find that CRTF
has shown a likelihood of success on the
merits, but we do consider that it has shown
fair grounds for litigation, we will
consider the balance of hardships.
It is clear that CRTF can make,
and has made, its offer conditional upon the
invalidation of the Poison Pill or the
redemption of the Rights. If Federated
should refuse to redeem the Rights, making
itself unpalatable to CRTF, CRTF can simply
back away from its offer. It will have lost
financing fees, SEC filing fees, and
attorneys' fees. If we were to enjoin
Federated from the exercise of the Rights
Plan, we would be making it vulnerable to a
street sweep; to this and other coercive,
two-tiered, front-end loaded tender offers;
to a decrease in existing offers; and
possibly to other dangers. Even without
entering into such fearsome perils, we might
be subjecting Federated to a transaction
that it deems inadequate because of the lack
of completely committed financing, and its
hesitation before that inadequacy might
prove to be well founded. Moreover, and most
important, we would be stopping the auction
sale now in progress.
Thus we find that the balance of
hardships tilts in the direction of
Federated.
Conclusion
"When ... battles for corporate
dominance spawn legal controversies, the
judicial role is neither to displace the
judgment of the participants nor to
predetermine the outcome. Rather, the
responsibility of the Court is to insure
that rules designed to safeguard the
fairness of the takeover process be
enforced."
Norlin Corp. v. Rooney, Pace Inc.,
744 F.2d 255, 258 (2d Cir. 1984).
We have found that the Plaintiff
does not have a likelihood of succeeding in
its claim that Federated's Board has not
acted in good faith after reasonable
investigation. We believe that the Federated
Board has reason to believe that a danger to
the corporation and its shareholders exists,
and we believe that the use of the Poison
Pill to thwart that danger is a reasonable
response. On this state of the record,
Federated's refusal to waive the Rights Plan
in the belief that the auction is continuing
also seems reasonable. CRTF's
representatives have already proposed the
possibility of a $69.50 offer, CRTF has
stated that it would add $2.20 per share to
the back end of its current offer if the
"break-up" fee were to be invalidated, and
CRTF is described by its counsel as being
determined to buy Federated. Accounts in the
press indicate that Macy's is considering
modifications of the terms of its offer.
Page 443
We believe that we would be more
likely to disrupt the auction at this point
by dismantling the Pill than by upholding
it. We will know that the auction has ended
when a bidder represents to the Court
unequivocally that it has made its final
offer, with the reservation described above.
What the posture would be here if no
improved offer were to arise, either from
CRTF or from some third party, and if the
Federated Board were to continue to invoke
the Rights Plan, is something we need not
and do not decide at this time.
In conclusion, we hold that
Defendant Federated's Board of Directors
receives the benefit of the business
judgment rule in its adoption of the Rights
Plan, and in the actions thus far taken
under that Plan. The motion for a
preliminary injunction is denied without
prejudice to renewal.
II. THE EXPIRATION DATE
Two issues are presented with
respect to the expiration date of the CRTF
offer. With respect to each of these issues
we have sought guidance from the Securities
and Exchange Commission.
The first relates to the claim by
Federated and Macy's that the revision of
the CRTF offer from a single-tier, all-cash
offer to a two-tiered all-cash offer
constituted a new offer which, under SEC
regulations under the Williams Act, could
not expire until twenty business days after
its promulgation. CRTF asserted that the
offer was an amended, not a new offer and
therefore expired ten business days after
promulgation.
In an amicus curiae submission of
March 16, the SEC opined that the CRTF offer
was an "amended offer" and that the ten-day
rule applied.
The SEC reasoned:
"The March 2 changes in the CRTF
tender offer are important changes, which
constitute an amendment to CRTF's offer
requiring an extension of ten business days,
but do not constitute a new offer. The two
changes made in the CRTF offer on March 2
were in the percentage of stock being sought
and the price to be paid for the stock. Both
of these items are covered by Rule 14e-1(b),
and are, pursuant to that rule, changes
which only require that the offer remain
open for ten business days. The twenty
business day period for new offers provided
by Rule 14e-1(a) allows for evaluation of
far more than price and quantity. Although
price and quantity are highly significant to
a security holder's investment decision, a
tender offeror also discloses the form of
consideration, the procedures for tendering
shares, information on financing, its
purpose in making the offer, its plans for
the target company and other information.
See Schedule 14D-1, 17 C.F.R. 14d-100.
The twenty-day requirement applicable to new
tender offers contemplates that all
of this information must be evaluated by
shareholders. On the facts presented here,
the changes do not, in themselves,
constitute a new offer.
The fact that the rule is phrased
in the disjunctive that is, requires that
the offer remain open for ten days if either
price or percentage is changed does not
mean, as Macy contends, that it is
inapplicable if both price and percentage
are changed. Indeed, changes in the price
being offered and the percentage of stock
being sought will often be linked, since the
blended price being paid to investors may
change as the percentage of stock being
sought changes. In this case, for example,
had CRTF not changed its price, but only
lowered the percentage of stock being
sought, investors might be confronted with
the prospect of a blended price change. The
net effect of the price changes made by
CRTF, increasing the consideration in the
tender offer to $75 per share while lowering
the consideration to be paid in the
second-step merger transaction to $44 per
share, is to keep the blended value
of the offer approximately the same as the
price prior to the March 2 changes. The
argument that investors would only need ten
business days to consider a percentage
change which might effectively change the
offering price, but twenty days to consider
a percentage change
Page 444
and a compensating price change, is not
persuasive. The Commission believes that the
ten days provided by the rule is sufficient
to enable investors to evaluate changes in
both price and percentage of stock being
sought." (Footnotes omitted.)
We accept this reasoning, not
merely in deference to the expertise of that
specialized and knowledgeable Agency, but
because its reasoning appears sound.
Accordingly, we deny so much of the
Defendant's motion as was predicated on its
claim that CRTF's offer was a new rather
than amended offer.
The second issue with respect to
the expiration date of the CRTF offer is
more troublesome. At the proceedings held on
Monday, March 14, the question was raised
whether CRTF had sufficiently disclosed
definitive details of its financing or
whether it would be required to file a
further statement with respect to financing,
with the consequence that the offer would
have to be extended until five days after
such filing. If the latter is the case, then
of course the CRTF offer must be held open
until five days after an event which has not
yet occurred.
We were advised by counsel for
CRTF on March 15 that the staff of the SEC
had tentatively determined that a further
filing as to financing would be required.
The SEC, whose views we have sought on the
question, will make those views known to the
Court early next week.
In this state of affairs and to
avoid confusion we determine that the CRTF
offer must remain in effect until the close
of business on Friday, March 25, 1988, or
such later date as the Court shall
determine. The Macy's offer, of course, by
its terms remains in effect until April 4.
[Epilogue: On March 28, in a
letter filed with the Court, the SEC opined
that "when CRTF has obtained commitments for
all or substantially all of the remaining
financing needed to complete its offer, that
will be a material change in its offer which
will have to be disclosed. Shareholders will
have to be provided a minimum of five
business days to consider that change." The
SEC cited Schedule 14D-1, 17 C.F.R.
240.14d-100 and Rule 14d-3, 17 C.F.R.
240.14d-3, which require a tender offeror to
provide with respect to borrowed funds,
"a summary of each loan agreement
or arrangement containing the identity of
the parties, the term, the collateral, the
stated and effective interest rates, and
other material terms or conditions relative
to such loan agreement."
The letter is on file as Court
Exhibit I of March 29, 1988.]
SO ORDERED.
Notes:
1. Although many of the observations in
this introduction are prompted by our role
in this case, nothing herein should be
viewed as a criticism of the extraordinarily
able and knowledgeable counsel who appeared
in this litigation.
2. CRTF initially sought expedited
discovery but later abandoned this request,
doubtless because of the time constraints
created by its self-imposed tender offer
expiration date.
3. A "sweep of the street" is the
acquisition of large quantities of stock at
reduced prices immediately after termination
of a tender offer primarily from arbitragers
who acquired stock in anticipation of the
offering being consummated.
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