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Page 458
683 F.Supp. 458
BNS INC., a Delaware corporation,
Plaintiff,
v.
KOPPERS COMPANY, INC., a Delaware
corporation, Charles F. Barber, Evelyn
Berezin, Anthony J.A. Bryan, Fletcher L.
Byrom, Dr. Richard M. Cyert, Edward Domley,
Daniel N. Galbreath, William H. Knoell,
Andrew W. Mathieseon, Charles R. Pullin,
Glen C. Tenley, Dr. Romesh Wadhawani,
and
Charles M. Oberly, III, Attorney General of
the State of Delaware,
and
Michael E. Harkins, Secretary of State of
the State of Delaware, Defendants.
Civ. A. No. 88-130 MMS. United States District Court, D.
Delaware. April 1, 1988. As Amended May 9, 1988.
Page 459
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED
Page 460
Steven D. Goldberg of Theisen,
Lank, Mulford and Goldberg, P.A., E. Norman
Veasey, Charles F. Richards, Jr., Allen M.
Terrell, Jr., Gregory P. Williams, and
Joseph J. Bodnar of Richards, Layton &
Finger, Wilmington, Del., Edwin Mishkin of
Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton, New York
City, of counsel, for plaintiff.
Charles S. Crompton, Jr., Peter
M. Sieglaff, and Gregory A. Inskip of
Potter, Anderson & Corroon, Wilmington,
Del., for defendants Koppers Co., Inc.,
Charles F. Barber, Evelyn Berezin, Anthony,
J.A. Bryan, Fletcher L. Byrom, Dr. Richard
M. Cyert, Edward Domley, Daniel N.
Galbreath, William H. Knoell, Andrew W.
Mathieseon, Charles R. Pullin, Glen C.
Tenley, Dr. Romesh Wadhawani.
A. Gilchrist Sparks, III of
Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell,
Wilmington, Del., for defendants Charles M.
Oberly, III, and Michael E. Harkins.
OPINION
MURRAY M. SCHWARTZ, Chief Judge.
BNS Inc. ("BNS") brings this
action against Koppers Company, Inc.
("Koppers"), the Attorney General of the
State of Delaware, Charles M. Oberly, III,
and the Secretary of State of the State of
Delaware, Michael E. Harkins, seeking an
order declaring unconstitutional the
newly-enacted Delaware Business Combinations
statute, Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, § 203 (1988)1
(the "Delaware Act" or "section 203"). BNS
also requests that the Court either declare
Kopper's stock purchase rights plan (the
"rights plan") invalid or order Koppers to
redeem the stock purchase rights.2
BNS urges the Delaware Act
frustrates the purposes of the Williams Act,
15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d)-(e), 78n(d)-(f) (1982),
and is thus preempted by operation of the
supremacy clause. Additionally, BNS argues
the Delaware Act impermissibly burdens
interstate commerce and accordingly is void
on commerce clause grounds. BNS bases its
attack on the rights plan on the assertion
that the refusal of Kopper's Board of
Directors to redeem the stock purchase
rights violates the directors' fiduciary
obligations to the stockholders.
The defendants insist BNS's
assault on the Delaware Act must fail,
contending that (i) the state statute does
not conflict with the Williams Act because
the Williams Act covers only tender offers,
and not the transactions regulated by
section 203; (ii) section 28(a) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. §
78bb(a) (1982), indicates that Congress
intended federal regulation of securities to
coexist with state regulation of
state-created corporations; (iii) the
plaintiff mischaracterizes the purposes of
the Williams Act and a truer
characterization reveals that the Delaware
statute is consistent with Williams Act
concerns; and (iv) a proper application of
commerce clause analysis demonstrates that
the Delaware statute survives commerce
clause scrutiny. Koppers takes issue as well
with the plaintiff's arguments regarding the
rights plan.
Page 461
For the reasons below I find the
Delaware Act regulating post-tender offer
business combinations most likely
constitutional. The plaintiff thus has
failed to demonstrate probable success on
the merits and the preliminary injunction
based on the alleged unconstitutionality of
the statute will be denied. Because the
plaintiff additionally has failed to
demonstrate that the rights plan most
probably will immediately, irreparably
injure BNS, the Court also will deny the
motion for a preliminary injunction on the
basis of the alleged invalidity of Koppers's
rights plan.
I. FACTS
A. The Offer
BNS is a Delaware corporation
owned by three entities: Bright Aggregates
Inc., a Delaware corporation and
wholly-owned subsidiary of Beazer PLC
("Beazer"), an English public limited
company, SL-Merger, Inc., a Delaware
corporation and wholly-owned indirect
subsidiary of Shearson Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. ("Shearson Lehman"), also a
Delaware corporation, and Speedward Limited,
an English company and wholly-owned indirect
subsidiary of NatWest Investment Bank
("NatWest"), an English company. BNS's
owners incorporated BNS for the purpose of
making a tender offer for Koppers's shares.
Koppers is a Delaware corporation
with its principal executive offices in
Pittsburgh. Koppers's business consists
primarily of construction materials and
services work. Approximately forty percent
of Koppers's business involves chemicals and
allied products activity.
Beazer is a general construction
company active in the construction and sale
of residential housing, the development and
management of commercial property, general
contracting and consulting with respect to
construction and engineering, and the
production of cement, concrete, and concrete
products.
On March 3, 1988, BNS commenced
its tender offer for all of the more than
28,000,000 outstanding shares of Koppers
common stock and all of the more than
150,000 outstanding shares of cumulative
preferred stock four percent series of
Koppers. Having been extended twice, the
offer is scheduled to expire at midnight on
April 7, 1988. BNS initially offered to
purchase the common stock for $45 per share
and the cumulative preferred stock for
$107.75 per share. For the first several
days following the announcement of BNS's
offer, Koppers's stock traded at levels
significantly above BNS's offer price.3
Koppers's board recommended rejection of the
$45 offer. On March 20 BNS raised its offer
for the common stock to $56 per share. The
stock continued to trade at levels slightly
above BNS's offer price, but the disparity
was less dramatic. Koppers again rejected
the offer as inadequate. On March 25, BNS
again raised its offer this time to $60.
The stock is now trading below this figure.
Koppers's board has not yet acted on this
further sweetened offer.
BNS states in its offer materials
that following a successful takeover of
Koppers, and provided certain conditions are
met, BNS will seek a merger or other
business combination with Koppers, after
which BNS plans to sell Koppers's chemicals
and related business. The merger or other
similar business combination would be
accomplished by converting the remaining
shares of Koppers common stock into the
right to receive the same cash price paid
pursuant to the tender offer. The planned
merger accords similar treatment to the
holders of Koppers preferred stock.
Among other conditions, BNS
hinges its offer on a finding by this Court
that the Delaware Act is unconstitutional or
that the Act does not apply to the
transaction contemplated by BNS, unless the
eventual course of events operates to render
the Act otherwise inapplicable.
Governor Castle signed the
Delaware Act on February 2, 1988. The Act
applies
Page 462
to all Delaware corporations, with
certain limited exceptions. The provisions
of the Act are summarized below.4
B. The Rights Plan
In addition to avoiding section
203, BNS conditions its offer on the
redemption of the rights issued pursuant to
Koppers's rights plan, or on BNS otherwise
escaping from the prospective resulting
dilution of its ownership.
In February of 1986, Koppers
adopted a stock purchase rights plan in the
form of a dividend to stockholders. The
dividend consisted of one right per share of
common stock to purchase 1/100th of a share
of Junior participating preferred stock. The
exercise price of the right is $75. The
rights plan was amended to provide that,
unless a "triggering event" occurs, (1) the
rights cannot be exercised, (2) the rights
do not trade separately from the common
stock, and (3) the rights are not
represented by separate certificates. The
plan defines a triggering event as the
earlier of
(1) ten days following the date
of a public announcement that a person (or
group) has acquired 20% or more of Koppers's
outstanding common (the "stock acquisition
date"), or
(2) ten business days following
the commencement of a tender offer or at
such later date as may be determined by the
board.
Under the plan as amended on
March 15, 1988, the rights are redeemable by
Koppers's board at any time until ten days
following the stock acquisition date, "or at
such later date as the Directors may
determine." The effect of this amendment is
to extend the date on which the rights would
have detached from March 17, ten business
days following the commencement of the
offer, until ten business days following
BNS's purchase of the tendered stock or
earlier, if the board so decides. Cyert
Affidavit, 7, 26 (D.I. 29). The
redemption price is five cents per right.
If Koppers is acquired in a
merger or other business combination after
the rights become exercisable, each right
entitles its holder to buy Koppers common
stock at a value double the exercise price
of $75 (the "flip-in"). The plan voids
rights owned by the acquiror. The flip-in
provision becomes operative when any person
acquires more than 30% of the outstanding
common of Koppers. The flip-in becomes
inoperative if Koppers's board approves the
terms of the acquisition, and if the
acquisition is then carried out in
accordance with the approved terms. Another
provision, the "flip-over," allows each
rights holder to buy $150 worth of stock in
the acquiring company for $75. As with the
flip-in provision, board approval exempts
acquirors from the flip-over.
BNS challenges the reasonableness
of the board's refusal to redeem the rights.
II. ANALYSIS
In order to succeed on its motion
for a preliminary injunction, BNS must
establish:
(1) a reasonable probability of
eventual success in the litigation, and (2)
that irreparable injury will ensue if relief
is not granted. In addition, the court may
consider (3) the possibility of harm to
other interested persons from the grant or
denial of relief, and (4) the public
interest. Constructors
573 F.2d 811, 815 (3d Cir.1978)'>Ass'n of
Western Penna. v. Kreps,
573 F.2d 811, 815 (3d Cir.1978);
Delaware River Port Auth. v. Transamerica
Trailer Transp., Inc., 501 F.2d 917,
919-20 (3d Cir.1974).
Kennecott
Corp. v. Smith, 637 F.2d 181, 187 (3rd
Cir.1980). If BNS can demonstrate a
reasonable probability of success on the
merits with respect to either of its
constitutional claims, it appears that the
remaining elements would weigh toward
granting an injunction in BNS's favor. The
injury threatened by the effect of the
statute, i.e., possible defeat of the offer,
"is precisely the harm sought to be avoided
by the Williams Act."5
Kennecott, 637 F.2d
Page 463
at 188. In this instance, therefore, the
elements of probability of success and
irreparable injury stand or fall together.
The second shot in BNS's salvo,
aimed primarily at the poison pill, will
find its mark if the plaintiff shows both
probable success on the merits and that
irreparable injury will result from
permitting Koppers to retain the power to
trigger the pill. Initially the Court will
review the constitutional challenges,
turning afterward to the validity of the
directors' actions.
A. BNS's Constitutional
Challenges
1. Background: State Takeover
Statutes
Following the United States
Supreme Court's decision
Edgar v. MITE Corp., 457 U.S. 624,
102 S.Ct. 2629, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982),
which invalidated the Illinois Business
Takeover Act on commerce clause grounds, and
in effect struck down virtually every other
state takeover statute, many states enacted
"second generation" takeover legislation.
See, Note, The Constitutionality of Second
Generation Takeover Statutes, 73
Va.L.Rev. 203, 204 (1987) [hereinafter
"Second Generation Statutes"]. In the
portion of the MITE opinion
constituting the opinion of the Court,
Justice White found the Illinois statute
indirectly burdened interstate commerce, and
held that the burden imposed outweighed any
legitimate state interests promoted by the
statute. MITE, 457 U.S. at 643-46,
102 S.Ct. at 2641-43.6
State legislatures addressed the
problem of regulating tender offers in the
wake of MITE by reconstructing their
statutes into four forms more closely
resembling traditional state corporation
laws: control share acquisitions statutes,7
fair price provision statutes,8
right of redemption statutes,9
and business combination statutes.10
See Second Generation Statutes at
207-12. By reconstructing their takeover
statutes in the form of traditional
corporate governance regulation, states
hoped to avoid the commerce clause
infirmities of the Illinois legislation
invalidated in MITE. See Langevoort,
Comment, The Supreme Court and the
Politics of Corporate Takeovers:
A Comment on CTS Corp. v. Dynamics Corp. of
America,
101 Harv.L.Rev. 96, 98 (1987). Several
of the second generation statutes, such as
those of Indiana and Maryland,11
combine two or more types of post-MITE
state takeover regulation. Because the
Supreme Court's affirmation of Indiana's
second generation statute
CTS Corp. v. Dynamics Corp., ___ U.S.
___, 107 S.Ct. 1637, 95 L.Ed.2d 67 (1987),
rests on certain features of that law in
relation to the Williams Act, a brief
description of Indiana's control share
acquisition statute clarifies analysis of
the constitutionality of the Delaware
statute.
Page 464
Indiana's control share
acquisition statute operates quite
differently from the Delaware approach. The
Indiana statute strips acquired blocks of
shares of voting rights, allowing for
reinstatement of voting rights following
shareholder approval. The acquiror's voting
rights resume if a majority of the
disinterested i.e., non-acquiror,
non-management shares vote to restore the
acquiror's voting rights at the next annual
meeting or at a special shareholders meeting
held within fifty days of the acquiror's
request (and paid for by the acquiror).
See Ind. Code Ann. § 23-1-42-3, -7,
-10(b). A separate part of Indiana's
takeover statute aims at post-transaction
business combinations, resembling the fourth
type of state response to MITE. See
Ind. Code Ann. § 23-1-43.
The most important statutory
reaction to MITE for current purposes
is the business combination statute. First
enacted by New York, and most recently by
Delaware, this type of statute prohibits
certain business combinations between an
"interested shareholder" and the target
corporation for an extended period of time
five years in the case of New York's
statute, and three years in Delaware's
section 203.12
Business combination statutes typically
contain exceptions allowing for friendly
offerors to consummate post-takeover
transactions. Common examples include board
approval,13 or
board approval plus a vote of a
supermajority of the stockholders.14
Business combination restrictions shield
shareholders from the coerciveness of
front-end loaded, two-tier offers by
preventing the offeror from effecting the
second step of the offer unless the target's
board of directors and, in some instances,
the target's shareholders, approve the
transaction.
2. The Delaware Statute
Delaware's statute, which may
qualify as a "third generation" statute,
having been passed after CTS, is
modeled after the kind of second generation
statute pioneered in New York.15
Section 203 encompasses a variety of
transactions between a stockholder and the
corporation of whose outstanding voting
stock the stockholder owns at least 15%. The
full statute is reproduced in the appendix
to this opinion, but, put simply, it
prevents "business combinations," broadly
defined,16 between
an "interested stockholder"17
and the target corporation18
Page 465
for a three-year period, unless one of
the exceptions to the statute applies.
Subsection (a) of section 20319
sets forth three ways an interested
stockholder otherwise subject to the section
may escape its moratorium on business
combinations. Subsection (b) lists
circumstances in which the section will not
apply at all. Subsection (a) allows a tender
offeror to consummate a second step merger
or other business combination where: (1) the
board approves the combination prior to the
date the offeror becomes an interested
stockholder; (2) the transaction which
transforms the stockholder into an
interested stockholder results in the
interested stockholder owning at least 85%
of the outstanding voting stock, excluding
for the purposes of calculating that
percentage shares owned by officers who are
also directors and certain employee stock
plans; (3) the board of directors approves
the business combination after the person
becomes an interested stockholder and the
proposed combination is authorized by 66 2/3
of the outstanding voting stock not owned by
the interested stockholder.
Subsection (b) lists six
circumstances in which section 203 will not
apply.20
Subsection
Page 466
(b)(1) permits newly-organized
corporations to exempt themselves from the
statute. Subsection (b)(2) gives the board
of directors of a Delaware corporation until
May 3, 1988,21 to
amend the corporation's bylaws to "opt-out"
of the coverage of the statute. Because the
terms of the directors on Koppers's board
are staggered, BNS cannot avail itself of
this provision of the statute.
The third subparagraph, (b)(3),
gives stockholders the power to amend the
corporation's bylaws or certificate of
incorporation in order to place the
corporation outside the statute. Such an
amendment will not be effective for twelve
months, however. Further, a successful
offeror is forbidden from using a
stockholder amendment opt-out. Only persons
who become interested stockholders after the
amendment may take advantage of it.
Subsection (b)(4) exempts certain
small companies not listed on a national
exchange, quoted through a national
securities association, or with fewer than
2,000 stockholders. The fifth subsection
provides that persons who become interested
stockholders inadvertently, e.g., through
gift or inheritance, are not bound by
section 203.
The sixth subsection of 203(b)
releases a bidder from combination
restrictions when management or a third
party approved by management proposes a
merger, sale of substantial assets, or
tender or exchange offer for more than 50%
of the outstanding voting stock. In that
event, the bidder may devise a competing
proposal within twenty days of the
announcement of the management-endorsed
proposal. This exception allows stockholders
an opportunity to consider competing bids.
3. Preemption
Before examining the Delaware
Act's viability in the face of the Williams
Act's purposes, a look at what those
purposes are is necessary.
Page 467
a. The Purposes of the Williams Act
Congress added the Williams Act,
Pub.L. No. 90-439, 82 Stat. 454 (codified as
amended at 15 U.S.C. §§ 78m(d)-(e),
78n(d)-(f) (1982)), to the system of federal
securities regulation to fill a gap in the
disclosure scheme set up by the 1933 and
1934 securities laws.
See Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries,
430 U.S. 1, 22, 97 S.Ct. 926, 939, 51
L.Ed.2d 124 (1977); 113 Cong. Rec.
854-55, 24,664 (1967). In the familiar words
of the bill's sponsor, Senator Williams:
Every effort has been made to
avoid tipping the balance of regulatory
burden in favor of management or in favor of
the offeror. The purpose of this bill is to
require full and fair disclosure for the
benefit of stockholders while at the same
time providing the offeror and management
equal opportunity to fairly present their
case.
113 Cong.Rec. 854-55 (1967)
(statement of Sen. Williams). The Securities
Act of 1933 and the Exchange Act of 1934
provided for disclosure to investors in
every area of securities transfers but that
to which the Williams Act addresses itself:
tender offers and the stock acquisitions
which typically precede them. Hence, prior
to 1968, shareholders were privy to
information about issuers, the financial
condition of issuers, plans for the funds
raised from the issue, information relevant
to securities bought or sold in the
secondary markets, and a variety of other
facts, see T. Hazen, The Law of
Securities Regulation §§ 1.1, 1.2
(Lawyers' ed. 1985 & Supp. 1987), but were
not provided with similar information
regarding the tender offeror.
Between the 1930's and the
1960's, cash tender offers grew in
popularity as a mode of corporate
acquisition.
See Edgar v. MITE, 457 U.S. 624, 632,
102 S.Ct. 2629, 2635, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982).
Responding to the increasing number of
corporate transactions beyond the scope of
the regulatory framework, Congress
constructed a statute imposing several
disclosure requirements on tender offerors
and their targets. The rationale for
requiring disclosure was (and is)
shareholder protection. Shareholders were at
a disadvantage compared to a potential
acquiror in terms of information relevant to
making a decision on the merits of the
offer. In mandating disclosure, Congress
deliberately contemplated requirements that
would have a neutral effect on the balance
of power between target management and the
acquiror.
See Piper v. Chris-Craft Industries,
430 U.S. 1, 30, 97 S.Ct. 926, 943, 51
L.Ed.2d 124 (1977).
This "careful balance," CTS,
107 S.Ct. at 1645, is not an end in itself.
It is rather Congress's judgment regarding
the means for achieving shareholder
protection. See CTS, 107 S.Ct. at
1645-46; Hyde Park Partners,
L.P. v. Connolly,
839 F.2d 837, 849-50 (1st Cir.1988).
Consequently, as the CTS Court points
out, incidental effects on the relative
positions of offerors and target managements
caused by legislation intended to promote
shareholder welfare do not contravene the
purposes of the Williams Act.
Of course, by regulating tender
offers, the Act makes them more expensive
and thus deters them somewhat, but this type
of reasonable regulation does not alter the
balance between management and offeror in
any significant way. The principal result of
the Act is to grant shareholders the power
to deliberate collectively about the merits
of tender offers. This result is fully in
accord with the purposes of the Williams
Act.
107 S.Ct. at 1646 n. 7. And as
Judge Coffin reasoned in Hyde Park,
[the Court's] task is to identify
the principal result of [the state
law], and to distinguish between that effect
and any consequences that are merely
secondary or incidental. One probative test
is to determine if the regulation alters the
balance between management and offeror in
any significant way, but this is not in
itself dispositive. [The Court's] focus
should remain on determining whether the
disclosure provisions are beneficial to the
investors caught between management and
offerors.
Hyde Park Partners,
L.P. v. Connolly,
839 F.2d 837, 850-51 (1st Cir.1988)
(emphasis in original).
Page 468
b. The Delaware Act
In examining the application of
the preemption doctrine to the Delaware act,
the threshold inquiry is the reach of the
state legislation. If the state law does not
intrude upon the federally regulated field,
the state law is not endangered by the
supremacy clause and further preemption
analysis is unnecessary. Delaware argues
here that because literal compliance with
both the Williams Act and Section 203 is
possible, and because section 203 does not
affect the tender offer process itself, the
preemption analysis ends. This argument
rests on a too narrow view of the scope of
the Williams Act. As the CTS Court
recognized, statutes which regulate the
ability of a successful offeror to control
the target, whether through voting rights
restrictions or otherwise, plainly implicate
Williams Act policies. See CTS, 107
S.Ct. at 1645-46.
The purpose of the Delaware
legislation, as presented in the synopsis to
the act and in certain testimony during the
hearings,22 is to
protect shareholders from the coercive
aspects of some tender offers. Given this
plain statement of legislative purpose, the
argument that the act does not affect
Williams Act goals seems disingenuous.
Admittedly, the Williams Act confines its
provisions to disclosure requirements and
procedural guidelines for the actual tender
offer, and does not address the rights of a
successful offeror once the tender is
completed. The point of requiring
disclosure, however, is to give stockholders
sufficient, balanced information upon which
to choose whether to tender their shares.
The Delaware Act operates to restrict the
choice of stockholders, albeit for the
shareholders' own welfare. The legislature
has determined that restricting stockholder
choice merely corrects for the coerciveness
inherent in many tender offers by
eliminating the possibility of second-step
freezeouts at a lower price.23
This Court need not disturb that legislative
judgment, but the fact remains that the law
restricts shareholder choice in the hostile
tender offer context. Preventing states from
unduly interfering with the tender offer
itself but allowing them to deprive the
tender offeror of perhaps the most important
fruit of gaining control, i.e., a business
combination, would permit a de facto
frustration of the goals of the Williams
Act.24
Having passed through the
threshold inquiry concerning the statutes'
overlap, preemption scrutiny of the Delaware
Act must begin with the proposition that the
power of the states to regulate tender
offers does not extend to complete
eradication of hostile offers. Delaware
contests this proposition. Delaware's
argument assumes that any advantage
given to management in the name of
shareholder protection, however significant,
is in keeping with the Williams Act. This
contention stretches CTS's reasoning
too far. A statute that favors management to
an extreme degree in effect will foreclose
hostile tender offers entirely.
CTS unmistakably teaches
that states have a legitimate interest in
regulating
Page 469
tender offers, despite the significant
influence such regulation has over the
transfer of securities and the so-called
market for corporate control. See CTS,
107 S.Ct. at 1647-48, 1651-52.
Notwithstanding this well-established
interest, the proposition that states may so
heavily regulate hostile tender offers as to
eliminate them altogether is untenable given
the Supreme Court's interpretation of the
goals of the Williams Act. As the Piper
Court noted in its examination of the
legislative history of the Williams Act,
Congress did not intend the Williams Act to
favor either target management or offerors,
but rather to protect the individual
investor. Piper, 430 U.S. at 30, 97
S.Ct. at 943. In devising a scheme of
investor protection, Congress recognized
that "takeover bids could often serve a
useful function," and that "entrenched
management, equipped with considerable
weapons in battles for control, tended to be
successful in fending off possibly
beneficial takeover attempts." Id.
The original bill introduced by Senator
Williams was strongly pro-management,
id., but Congress revised the bill to
achieve a "policy of evenhandedness," id.
at 31, 97 S.Ct. at 944, and through this
policy to further the ultimate goal of
investor protection by leaving room for
hostile bids to succeed.
From the premise that the state
cannot eliminate hostile tender offers comes
the hoary question to what extent a state
may limit them. CTS contemplates some
degree of limitation, but does not set forth
a pellucid test. Therefore, this Court must
infer from
Piper v. Chris-Craft,
430 U.S. 1, 97
S.Ct. 926, 51 L.Ed.2d 124 (1977),
Edgar v. MITE, 457 U.S. 624, 102
S.Ct. 2629, 73 L.Ed.2d 269 (1982), and
CTS Corp. v. Dynamics Corp., ___ U.S.
___, 107 S.Ct. 1637, 95 L.Ed.2d 67 (1987),
what degree of restriction of tender offers
is constitutional. The plaintiff argues that
a substantial alteration of the balance
between management and the offeror conflicts
with the Williams Act. The fair import of
the cases, however, is that even statutes
with substantial deterrent effects on tender
offers do not circumvent Williams Act goals,
so long as hostile offers which are
beneficial to target shareholders have a
meaningful opportunity for success. Applying
the analysis of CTS to section 203
and assessing the effects of 203's
exceptions shows that the statute and the
Williams Act can co-exist.
In CTS, as here, the state
statute will be preempted only if it
"frustrates the full purposes and objectives
of Congress."
Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52, 67,
61 S.Ct. 399, 404, 85 L.Ed. 581 (1941).
Following the analysis of Justice Powell,
whether the Delaware statute frustrates the
purposes of the Williams Act may be
determined by asking four questions. CTS,
107 S.Ct. at 1646. First, does the statute
protect independent shareholders from
coercion? Second, does the statute give
either management or the offeror an
advantage in communicating with
stockholders? This question may be
reformulated to fit the circumstances of the
present case by phrasing it as whether the
statute gives either management or the
offeror an advantage in consummating or
defeating an offer. Third, does the statute
impose an indefinite or unreasonable delay
on offers? And fourth, does the statute
allow the state government to interpose its
views of fairness between willing buyers and
sellers? The answers to these questions
indicate that, although the issue is not an
easy one, on this preliminary injunction
record, the Delaware statute does not
conflict with the purposes of the Williams
Act to an impermissible degree.
The statute offers protection to
independent shareholders by preventing
certain dealings between a successful
offeror and the target corporation. In so
doing, the statute eliminates most
unsanctioned (by the target's board with or
without the shareholders) freezeouts, or
post-tender offer mergers between the
offeror and the company whereby remaining
shareholders are forced to sell their stock
for cash or securities. Preventing
unapproved mergers also effectively
eliminates many leveraged buyouts, in which
the assets of the target company provide
resources for servicing the debt incurred by
the bidder in taking control.
Page 470
While the statute does give
target management an advantage in fighting
an unwanted takeover, CTS suggests
that incidentally pro-management measures
undertaken to benefit shareholders do not
offend Williams Act policies. See CTS,
107 S.Ct. at 1646 n. 7. The CTS Court
found the Indiana statute's main advantage
to management, the delay beyond the
twenty-day SEC minimum for holding offers
open, a reasonable delay that did not
conflict with the Williams Act. The Indiana
statute, however, also was one about which
Justice Powell could state: "the statute now
before the Court protects the independent
shareholder against both of the contending
parties." Id. at 1645. Section 203
does not lend itself to such a
characterization. This Court is unable,
though, to divine the full extent of the
advantage bestowed on incumbent management
by the law, and on this record cannot find
that the advantage outweighs the benefits
conferred on shareholders.
As to the delay caused by the
statute, it imposes none on the actual
purchase of shares. And although the statute
delays the acquisition of full control
following purchase for three years if no
exception applies, a staggered board delays
shifts of control for two years. The
additional theoretical one-year delay is not
troublesome for preemption purposes. See
CTS, 107 S.Ct. at 1647.
Finally, the Delaware statute
does not interpose the state government's
views of fairness between willing buyers and
sellers. Instead, section 203 permits
incumbent management and a minority of the
stockholders to impose their views of
fairness on willing but sometimes
overreaching buyers and willing but
sometimes coerced sellers. Legislative
judgment that management may be trusted to
act in the best interests of shareholders is
subject to criticism. See, e.g.,
Fischel, The "Race to the Bottom"
Revisited: Reflections on Recent
Developments in Delaware's Corporation Law,
76 Nw. U.L. Rev. 913 (1982) (summarizing
former SEC Chairman William Cary's position
on the pro-management bias of state
corporation law and how this bias allegedly
hurts shareholders). Nevertheless,
entrusting management to protect
shareholders is the norm in current
corporate law. Moreover, the heightened
judicial scrutiny of management imposed by
Delaware law in the takeover context,
Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum,
493 A.2d 946 (Del.1985), no doubt also will
apply to the decisions of boards with
respect to proposed business combinations.
Therefore, notwithstanding the
pro-management tilt of the Delaware statute,
Delaware's section 203 more probably than
not is within the sphere of constitutional
state regulation of tender offers.
Section 203 alters the balance
between target management and the offeror,
perhaps significantly. Yet the section will
be constitutional notwithstanding its
pro-management slant, so long as it does not
prevent an appreciable number of hostile
bidders from navigating the statutory
exceptions.
Leaving aside for the moment the
exceptions specified in subsection (b),
there are three major "outs" or escapes of
subsection (a). The first, board approval,
however, will necessarily be absent in the
hostile takeover context,25
leaving the bidder with just two escape
routes. These two outs work in favor of
target management, and accordingly to the
detriment of the offeror. But on this
record, the statute appears to offer hostile
bidders the necessary degree of opportunity
to effect a business combination.
The second escape route relieves
the offeror from the statute's strictures if
eighty-five percent of the stockholders
(excluding shares held by officer-directors
and certain employee stock ownership plans
("ESOPs")),26
tender their shares. This escape
Page 471
may place a heavy burden on the offeror
hoping to consummate the transaction despite
the opposition of management, but the
evidence is conflicting.
According to Commissioner
Grundfest, an investigation by the SEC
revealed "no example in the history of
hostile takeovers ... where a hostile bidder
obtained 90% of a target's shares if
management was hostile through to the end."
Hearings at 24. Apparently in response to
this concern, the recommended bill lowered
the percentage exemption from 90% to 85%,
and excluded some management and ESOP shares
from the calculation. See State's Br.
at 15. Whether this relaxation will permit a
sufficient number of hostile-to-the-end
offers remains to be seen. Commissioner
Grundfest suggested a threshold figure of
75%, "or some other realistic figure."
Affidavit of Michael Houghton, D.I. 20, Exh.
5 (Letter of Dec. 10, 1987, from Joseph
Grundfest to David Brown) [hereinafter
"Houghton aff."] Grundfest recommended that
the 75% figure exclude all shares
held by management. Id. In another
letter, see Houghton aff., exh. 8,
Grundfest likened a 65% threshold to a
political "victory by a landslide." See
also Affidavit of Steven B. Wolitzer,
D.I. 14, 6 ("It would ... be extremely
difficult, if not impossible, to obtain 85%
of the Common Shares of Koppers by the
expiration of the tender offer in the face
of opposition by the Board of Koppers,
regardless of the fairness of the price
being offered.")
In the other corner on the 85%
question, Martin Lipton commented that "[i]t
will be a rare situation where a tender
offer will not attract 85% of the target's
non-management stock." Houghton aff., exh.
9. Similarly, Raymond Groth, of First
Boston, stated that "the vast majority of
tender offers which are not abandoned have
resulted in the acquisition of more than 85%
of the shares of the target." Groth aff.,
8 (D.I. 30).
A possible explanation of the
differences of opinion on this issue may lie
in the assumption on the plaintiff's side,
which is absent on the defendants' side,
that the Koppers board will remain hostile
to the BNS offer. Negotiated acquisitions
often will result in a higher percentage of
stock purchased. See Impact Hearings
at 386. This Court, however, is not prepared
to rule on the appropriate percentage of
post-tender ownership required to insulate
minority stockholders from coercive two-tier
bids in the absence of facts refuting the
state's determination, as contrasted to
unsubstantiated intuitive opinion. Such
facts are not present here27;
accordingly, subsection (a)(2) must be
viewed as giving hostile offerors an
opportunity to consummate their offers and
receive full control despite management
opposition.
The third escape, board approval
and approval of two-thirds of the
nontendering stockholders (again excluding
the offeror, but including management),
subsection (a)(3), also possibly places a
substantial burden on would-be acquirors.
The vote requires the offeror to woo and win
two-thirds of the very group including
managementthat refused initially to tender.
This supermajority vote contrasts with that
in place in Indiana, where tendering and
nontendering shareholders excluding
management vote on the rights of the
acquiror by a simple majority. Standing
Page 472
alone, this exception might well be
illusory.
In sum, the effects of the three
exceptions contained in subsection (a) are
not easily predictable. The legislature's
judgment is that those escapes, together
with the exceptions specified in subsection
(b), allow offers beneficial to shareholders
to proceed, and thus save the statute from
constitutional infirmity.
Notwithstanding section 203's
possible injurious effects, because it
benefits stockholders, and because the
legislature presumably has balanced the
countervailing effects and found the degree
of stockholder protection to offset
potential harm to stockholders, the Court
concludes that the statute will be in all
likelihood constitutional and not preempted.
If the method Delaware has chosen to protect
stockholders in fact on balance harms them,
then at that time reconsideration of the
statute's congruence with the Williams Act
will be warranted.
Subsection (b)'s provisions, with
the exception of subsection (b)(6), which
allows competitive bidding in certain
circumstances, do not materially alter the
effect of the statute. Subsection (b)(1),
which permits newly-organized companies to
exempt themselves from the statute, of
course does not apply to all of the
companies now in existence. Subsection
(b)(2) (allowing the board of a company to
opt-out of the statute) will expire in early
May of this year, and will be primarily
applicable to non-staggered boards.
Subsection (b)(3) by its own terms is
ineffective for a year, and may not be used
by a successful offeror. Subsection (b)(4)
merely excludes certain small companies from
the statute. Subsection (b)(5) provides that
stockholders whose ownership rises above the
fifteen percent threshold inadvertently are
not subject to the statute, and therefore
does not cover hostile tender offers.
4. Commerce Clause Defects
The second constitutional defect
of the statute, BNS asserts, is that it
places an undue burden on interstate
commerce. This argument is unpersuasive. The
three-step commerce clause inquiry set forth
in CTS reveals that the statute
harmonizes well with commerce clause
dictates in the state takeover regulation
context.
The CTS Court analyzed the
Indiana statute's compliance with the
commerce clause by using a three-part test:
(1) are the effects of the statute
discriminatory?28;
(2) does the statute create an impermissible
risk of inconsistent regulation?29;
and (3) does the statute promote stable
corporate relationships and protect
shareholders?30
The answers to these questions demonstrate
that the plaintiff's commerce clause
arguments miss the mark.
The effects of Delaware's
regulation of corporations it charters in
the area of business combinations are not
discriminatory. States may regulate their
own corporate citizens. "No principle of
corporate law is more firmly established
than a State's authority to regulate
domestic corporations...." CTS, 107
S.Ct. at 1649. Section 203 does not
discriminate between offerors which are
Delaware corporations and offerors which are
not incorporated here.
The second part of the CTS
commerce clause test, pertaining to the risk
of inconsistent regulation, also may be
answered negatively. The MITE Court
strongly criticized the Illinois statute
because of its extraterritorial effects.
See Edgar v. MITE Corp., 457 U.S.
624, 642, 102 S.Ct. 2629, 2640, 73 L.Ed.2d
269 (1982) (plurality opinion of White,
J.). Conversely, the CTS Court
identified an advantage of Indiana's statute
as being that it applied only to Indiana
corporations with a significant number of
Indiana resident shareholders. CTS,
107 S.Ct. at 1649, 1652. The fact that a
vast majority of Delaware's corporations do
not have their main office in Delaware or
many resident shareholders does not prevent
Delaware from regulating tender offers
affecting these corporations and does not
inevitably create a risk of inconsistent
regulation. See id. at 1649.
Page 473
Thirdly, the Delaware statute
both promotes stable corporate relationships
and protects shareholders. In so doing, the
statute reflects valid state concerns.31
Indications that the stated purpose of the
statute may not wholly conform with the
legislature's true motives, however strong,
must be ignored where the statute does
accomplish the stated purpose. The
Constitution does not require state
corporate law to be pure of concern for the
state's financial well-being, so long as the
statute does not circumvent the policies of
the commerce clause.
Section 203 is an exquisitely
crafted legislative response to a variety of
perceived problems. Were it less delicately
constructed to remain within the sphere of
constitutionality, the outcome of this
Court's analysis might be quite different.
But nothing prevents a state legislature
from extending its power to the limits of
constitutionality.
For the reasons stated above, I
conclude on the record before me that it is
probable the Delaware Act will be held
constitutional. Accordingly, BNS has failed
to establish a probability of success on the
merits. An order will be entered denying
BNS's application for a preliminary
injunction.
B. Koppers's Poison Pill: The
Rights Plan
BNS's attack on the Koppers
rights plan centers on the reasonableness of
the directors' refusal to redeem the rights
in light of BNS's offer. The role of the
Court in assessing the decisions made by
directors in the hostile tender offer
context is an intricate composite of
deference to the business expertise of the
directors and close scrutiny of incumbent
management decisions. The Delaware law
detailing the Court's role is mapped out in
three recent decisions:
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings,
506 A.2d 173 (Del.1986);
Moran v. Household International, Inc.,
500 A.2d 1346 (Del.1985); and
Unocal Corp. v. Mesa Petroleum Co.,
493 A.2d 946 (Del.1985).
The presence of a hostile bidder
strains the ability of a board of directors
to act in the best interests of its
shareholders, because of "the omnipresent
specter that a board may be acting primarily
in its own interests...." Unocal, 493
A.2d at 954. Consequently, before directors
may rely on the presumptions accorded them
by the business judgment rule, the Delaware
courts require the directors to overcome two
additional hurdles. First, the directors
must show that reasonable grounds existed
for believing there was "a danger to
corporate policy and effectiveness." Id.
at 955;
Revlon, Inc. v. MacAndrews & Forbes
Holdings, 506 A.2d 173, 180 (Del.1986)
(relying on Unocal). Second, the
directors must show that their response was
"reasonable in relation to the threat
posed." Unocal, 493 A.2d at 955.
Page 474
To clear the first hurdle,
showing a plausible basis for perceiving a
threat to the corporation, the directors
must demonstrate that they acted in good
faith, after having investigated the
putative threat and options for countering
it. Id.; see Revlon, 506 A.2d 173,
180. The board can meet the second hurdle by
showing that the nature of the takeover and
its probable effect on the corporation
justifies the board's defensive stance.
Id.
Once a board satisfactorily
establishes that it had reasonable grounds
for believing a danger existed and that the
defensive tactics employed were reasonable
in relation to that danger, the business
judgment rule applies. That rule prevents
courts from revisiting decisions made in a
particular business context.32
Aronson v. Lewis,
473 A.2d 805
(Del.1984) sets forth an oft-quoted
capsulization of the rule: "It is 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 was
taken in the best interests of the company."
Id. at 812 (citations omitted).
To overcome the presumption
enjoyed by the directors by virtue of the
business judgment rule, the plaintiff has
the "burden of persuasion to show a breach
of the directors' fiduciary duties."
Moran, 500 A.2d at 1356. The plaintiff
may meet its burden by producing evidence
that the directors have acted solely or
primarily for the purposes of perpetuating
themselves in office, i.e., for the purposes
of entrenchment. See Unocal, 493 A.2d
at 958. Additionally, the plaintiff may meet
its burden by demonstrating that the board
breached a fiduciary duty "such as fraud,
overreaching, lack of good faith, or being
uninformed...." Id.
BNS has focused its attack on the
refusal of Koppers's board to redeem the
rights and thus defuse the poison pill. BNS
concedes that adoption of the pill was
within the authority of the board, see
Moran, 500 A.2d at 1351-53, and that the
subsequent amendments were proper.
Transcript of Hearing before Schwartz, C.J.,
on March 23, 1988, at 47. BNS's sole
complaint regarding the pill is that the
board of directors has not redeemed the
rights.
The directors of Koppers have a
continuing duty to evaluate the fitness of
their defensive strategy in light of
developments in the ongoing battle. See
Moran, 500 A.2d at 1354 ("The Board has
no more discretion in refusing to redeem the
Rights than it does in enacting any
defensive mechanism."). Unocal
supplies the standard for monitoring whether
the directors have acted in keeping with
their duty. Thus, the propriety of the
Koppers board's particular defensive
strategy, threatened use of the poison pill,
depends on whether (i) Koppers's board can
surmount the two Unocal hurdles of
reasonably perceived danger and an
appropriate response; and (ii) if so,
whether BNS can demonstrate that the Koppers
board breached its fiduciary duties. See
Moran, 500 A.2d at 1356.
The directors have not breached
their duty. Their actions appear to have
been in good faith, and were taken after a
relatively full investigation of BNS's
offers. Given the nature of the BNS offer,
the board's responses thus far have been
reasonable.
Just prior to the commencement of
BNS's offer, at the board's regularly
scheduled monthly meeting, the directors
reviewed Koppers's financial position in
depth. Answering Brief of Defendant Koppers
Company at 13. Materials concerning the
review of the company's financial position
were disseminated two weeks before the
meeting. Information regarding the company's
worth and prospects thus was fresh in the
minds of the directors when BNS launched its
first offer. After the offer, the directors
met again, on March 10, 1988, to evaluate
the bid. They determined to explore
available alternatives before responding to
the offer, and instructed their investment
banker, First
Page 475
Boston, to investigate the adequacy of
the offer.
In the opinion of First Boston,
the $45 offer was inadequate, except with
respect to the preferred shares. Affidavit
of Raymond C. Groth, 3 (D.I. 30). The
board rejected the offer only after
conducting a serious review of several
relevant factors, including: (i) the board's
assessment of the value of the company; (ii)
the advice of First Boston; (iii) the
possibility of other transactions yielding
greater value to Koppers stockholders; and
(iv) the likelihood of the BNS offer
failing.
Following BNS's sweetening of its
initial offer to $56, the Koppers board held
a special meeting on March 22, 1988, to
decide its position. By a unanimous vote of
all the directors who were present, the
board again rejected the offer as
inadequate. The bases for this rejection
were similar to those outlined above. First
Boston and Dillon Read opined that the
higher offer was also inadequate. The
company communicated to its stockholders the
recommendation, stating that, in the eyes of
the directors, "the Company remaining
independent would be a superior alternative
over the long term to accepting the revised
BNS Offer." Letter of March 22, 1988, from
Charles R. Pullin, Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Koppers, to Koppers
stockholders.
The Court finds the actions of
the Koppers directors reasonable in light of
the risk posed by the BNS offer. The
plaintiff's complaint breaks into two parts.
First, the plaintiff urges that its offer
cannot constitute a threat. Second, the
plaintiff contends that Koppers's board must
redeem the rights because refusal to do so
is unreasonable given BNS's offer. Contrary
to the plaintiff's assertions, the
inadequacy of the offering price does
present a threat to the company and its
stockholders. While the board is not
permitted to engage in whatever defensive
measures it pleases in light of BNS's offer,
the measures resorted to thus far have not
been disproportionate.
The board is considering
implementing a recapitalization plan, but it
has not yet done so. This Court cannot
determine ahead of time the reasonableness
or unreasonableness of any action by
Koppers's board with regard to such a plan.
Only after firmer action by the board, such
as an endorsement and announcement of a
particular plan, would intervention
possibly be appropriate.
The fact that a majority of
Koppers's board of directors is
disinterested enhances Koppers's Unocal
showing.
See Ivanhoe Partners v. Newmont Mining
Corporation, 535 A.2d 1334, 1343
(Del.1987). The board's enactment of the
poison pill without the consent or approval
of the stockholders does not make the board
"interested," and
AC Acquisitions Corp. v. Anderson,
Clayton & Co.,
519 A.2d 103
(Del.Ch.1986), does not hold otherwise.
AC Acquisitions involved
actions by target directors which foreclosed
stockholder choice. Chancellor Allen based
his holding that the directors' conduct was
not reasonable in relation to the threat
posed on the preclusion of the shareholders
from accepting the hostile offer over the
company's alternative. See id. at
113. The case does not stand for the
proposition cited by the plaintiff, that
directors become interested when they adopt
defensive mechanisms without shareholder
approval. Rather, AC Acquisitions
deplores a board acting to cut off the
possibility of success of a competing offer
which the board's investment banker was
unable to call inadequate. See id. at
110.
In oral argument, counsel for BNS
contended that there was evidence that
Koppers's board had not behaved with good
faith in rejecting BNS's offers. On the
record thus far, this contention appears
unwarranted. The board had reviewed the
company's financial position just prior to
the commencement of BNS's first offer. The
third offer, for $60, is pending. Koppers's
board extended the date on which the rights
were to detach from March 17 until such time
as the directors shall determine. In so
doing, the board left open the possibility
that it would later redeem the rights.
Page 476
A large part of BNS's lack of
good faith argument turns on the refusal of
Koppers's board to negotiate with BNS.
Whether or not Koppers is under a duty to
negotiate is questionable. The plaintiff has
cited no Delaware Supreme Court case
imposing such a duty on directors. See
Plaintiff's Memorandum in Support of
Plaintiff's Motion for a Declaratory
Judgment and a Preliminary Injunction, at 49
n. 22. Even assuming such a duty exists, the
directors have not taken any irrevocable
steps to defeat BNS's offer, nor have they
implemented any defensive measures which
effectively have placed the company up for
auction. See Revlon, 506 A.2d at 182.
In any event, in the face of the Koppers
board's refusal to negotiate or to redeem
the rights, BNS has raised its offer twice.
To overcome the directors showing
that their decisions with regard to BNS's
offer deserve deference under the business
judgment rule, the plaintiff must show that
these decisions were undertaken solely or
primarily in order to entrench themselves in
office, or that the directors otherwise
breached their fiduciary duties.
See Pogostin v. Rice, 480 A.2d 619,
627 (Del.1984);
Johnson v. Trueblood, 629 F.2d 287,
292-93 (3d Cir.1980), cert. denied,
450 U.S. 999, 101 S.Ct. 1704, 68 L.Ed.2d 200
(1981) (applying Delaware law). Thus far,
the plaintiff has not brought forward
evidence sufficient to show entrenchment or
breach of fiduciary duty.
Based on the above, the plaintiff
has failed to show either a probability of
success on the merits or irreparable injury.
An order will issue consistent with this
opinion.
APPENDIX
§ 203 Business Combinations
with Interested Stockholders
(a) Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this chapter, a corporation
shall not engage in any business combination
with any interested stockholder for a period
of 3 years following the date that such
stockholder became an interested
stockholder, unless (1) prior to such date
the board of directors of the corporation
approved either the business combination or
the transaction which resulted in the
stockholder becoming an interested
stockholder, or (2) upon consummation of the
transaction which resulted in the
stockholder becoming an interested
stockholder, the interested stockholder
owned at least 85% of the voting stock of
the corporation outstanding at the time the
transaction commenced, excluding for
purposes of determining the number of shares
outstanding those shares owned (i) by
persons who are directors and also officers
and (ii) employee stock plans in which
employee participants do not have the right
to determine confidentially whether shares
held subject to the plan will be tendered in
a tender or exchange offer, or (3) on or
subsequent to such date the business
combination is approved by the board of
directors and authorized at an annual or
special meeting of stockholders, and not by
written consent, by the affirmative vote of
at least 66 2/3 of the outstanding voting
stock which is not owned by the interested
stockholder.
(b) The restrictions contained in
this section shall not apply if:
(1) the corporation's original
certificate of incorporation contains a
provision expressly electing not to be
governed by this section;
(2) the corporation, by action of
its board of directors, adopts an amendment
to its bylaws within 90 days of the
effective date of this section expressly
electing not to be governed by this section,
which amendment shall not be further amended
by the board of directors;
(3) the corporation, by action of
its stockholders, adopts an amendment to its
certificate of incorporation or bylaws
expressly electing not to be governed by
this section, provided that, in addition to
any other vote required by law, such
amendment to the certificate of
incorporation or bylaws must be approved by
the affirmative vote of a majority of the
shares entitled to vote. An amendment
adopted pursuant to this paragraph shall not
be effective until 12 months after the
adoption of such amendment and shall not
apply to any business combination
Page 477
between such corporation and any person
who became an interested stockholder of such
corporation on or prior to such adoption. A
bylaw amendment adopted pursuant to this
paragraph shall not be further amended by
the board of directors;
(4) the corporation does not have
a class of voting stock that is (i) listed
on a national securities exchange, (ii)
authorized for quotation on an inter dealer
quotation system of a registered national
securities association or (iii) held of
record by more than 2,000 stockholders,
unless any of the foregoing results from
action taken, directly or indirectly, by an
interested stockholder or from a transaction
in which a person becomes an interested
stockholder;
(5) a stockholder becomes an
interested stockholder inadvertently and (i)
as soon as practicable divests sufficient
shares so that the stockholder ceases to be
an interested stockholder and (ii) would
not, at any time within the 3 year period
immediately prior to a business combination
between the corporation and such
stockholder, have been an interested
stockholder but for the inadvertent
acquisition; or
(6) the business combination is
proposed prior to the consummation or
abandonment of and subsequent to the earlier
of the public announcement or the notice
required hereunder of a proposed transaction
which (i) constitutes one of the
transactions described in the second
sentence of this paragraph; (ii) is with or
by a person who either was not an interested
stockholder during the previous 3 years or
who became an interested stockholder with
the approval of the corporation's board of
directors; and (iii) is approved or not
opposed by a majority of the members of the
board of directors then in office (but not
less than 1) who were directors prior to any
person becoming an interested stockholder
during the previous 3 years or were
recommended for election or elected to
succeed such directors. The proposed
transactions referred to in the preceding
sentence are limited to (x) a merger or
consolidation of the corporation (except for
a merger in respect of which, pursuant to
section 251 of this chapter, no vote of the
stockholders of the corporation is
required); (y) a sale, lease, exchange,
mortgage, pledge, transfer or other
disposition (in one transaction or a series
of transactions), whether as part of a
dissolution or otherwise, of assets of the
corporation or of any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
(other than to any direct or indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary or to the
corporation) having an aggregate market
value equal to 50% or more of either that
aggregate market value of all of the assets
of the corporation determined on a
consolidated basis or the aggregate market
value of all the outstanding stock of the
corporation; or (z) a proposed tender or
exchange offer for 50% or more of the
outstanding voting stock of the corporation.
The corporation shall give not less than 20
days notice to all interested stockholders
prior to the consummation of any of the
transactions described in clauses (x) or (y)
of the second sentence of the paragraph.
Notwithstanding paragraphs (1), (2), (3) and
(4) of this subsection, a corporation may
elect by a provision of its original
certificate of incorporation or any
amendment thereto to be governed by this
section, provided that any such amendment to
the certificate of incorporation shall not
apply to restrict a business combination
between the corporation and an interested
stockholder of the corporation if the
interested stockholder became such prior to
the effective date of the amendment.
(c) As used in this section only,
the term:
(1) `affiliate' means a person
that directly, or indirectly through one or
more intermediaries, controls, or is
controlled by, or is under common control
with, another person,
(2) `associate,' when used to
indicate a relationship with any person,
means (i) any corporation or organization of
which such person is a director, officer or
partner or is, directly or indirectly, the
owner of 20% or more of any class of voting
Page 478
stock, (ii) any trust or other estate in
which such person has at least a 20%
beneficial interest or as to which such
person serves as trustee or in a similar
fiduciary capacity, and (iii) any relative
or spouse of such person, or any relative of
such spouse, who has the same residence as
such person,
(3) `business combination,' when
used in reference to any corporation and any
interested stockholder of such corporation,
means:
(i) any merger or consolidation
of the corporation or any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
with (A) the interested stockholder, or (B)
with any other corporation if the merger or
consolidation is caused by the interested
stockholder and as a result of such merger
or consolidation subsection (a) of this
section is not applicable to the surviving
corporation;
(ii) any sale, lease, exchange,
mortgage, pledge, transfer or other
disposition (in one transaction or a series
of transactions), except proportionately as
a stockholder of such corporation, to or
with the interested stockholder, whether as
part of a dissolution or otherwise, of
assets of the corporation or of any direct
or indirect majority-owned subsidiary of the
corporation which assets have an aggregate
market value equal to 10% or more of either
the aggregate market value of all the assets
of the corporation determined on a
consolidated basis or the aggregate market
value of all the outstanding stock of the
corporation;
(iii) any transaction which
results in the issuance or transfer by the
corporation or by any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
of any stock of the corporation or of such
subsidiary to the interested stockholder,
except (A) pursuant to the exercise,
exchange or conversion of securities
exercisable for, exchangeable for or
convertible into stock of such corporation
or any such subsidiary which securities were
outstanding prior to the time that the
interested stockholder became such, (B)
pursuant to a dividend or distribution paid
or made, or the exercise, exchange or
conversion of securities exercisable for,
exchangeable for or convertible into stock
of such corporation or any such subsidiary
which security is distributed, pro rata to
all holders of a class or series of stock of
such corporation subsequent to the time the
interested stockholder became such, (C)
pursuant to an exchange offer by the
corporation to purchase stock made on the
same terms to all holders of said stock, or
(D) any issuance or transfer of stock by the
corporation, provided however, that in no
case under (B) (D) above shall there be an
increase in the interested stockholder's
proportionate share of the stock of any
class or series of the corporation or of the
voting stock of the corporation;
(iv) any transaction involving
the corporation or any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
which has the effect, directly or
indirectly, of increasing the proportionate
share of the stock of any class or series,
or securities convertible into the stock of
any class or series, of the corporation or
of any such subsidiary which is owned by the
interested stockholder, except as a result
of immaterial changes due to fractional
share adjustments or as a result of any
purchase or redemption of any shares of
stock not caused, directly or indirectly, by
the interested stockholder; or
(v) any receipt by the interested
stockholder of the benefit, directly or
indirectly (except proportionately as a
stockholder of such corporation) of any
loans, advances, guarantees, pledges, or
other financial benefits (other than those
expressly permitted in subparagraphs (i)
(iv) above) provided by or through the
corporation or any direct or indirect
majority owned subsidiary.
(4) `control,' including the term
`controlling,' `controlled by' and `under
common control with,' means the possession,
directly or indirectly, of the power to
direct
Page 479
or cause the direction of the management
and policies of a person, whether through
the ownership of voting stock, by contract,
or otherwise. A person who is the owner of
20% or more of a corporation's outstanding
voting stock shall be presumed to have
control of such corporation, in the absence
of proof by a preponderance of the evidence
to the contrary. Notwithstanding the
foregoing, a presumption of control shall
not apply where such person holds voting
stock, in good faith and not for the purpose
of circumventing this section, as an agent,
bank, broker, nominee, custodian or trustee
for one or more owners who do not
individually or as a group have control of
such corporation.
(5) `interested stockholder'
means any person (other than the corporation
and any direct or indirect majority-owned
subsidiary of the corporation) that (i) is
the owner of 15% or more of the outstanding
voting stock of the corporation, or (ii) is
an affiliate or associate of the corporation
and was the owner of 15% or more of the
outstanding voting stock of the corporation
at any time within the 3-year period
immediately prior to the date on which it is
sought to be determined whether such person
is an interested stockholder; and the
affiliates and associates of such person;
provided, however, that the term `interested
stockholder' shall not include (x) any
person who (A) owned shares in excess of the
15% limitation set forth herein as of, or
acquired such shares pursuant to a tender
offer commenced prior to, December 23, 1987
or pursuant to an exchange offer announced
prior to the aforesaid date and commenced
within 90 days thereafter and continued to
own shares in excess of such 15% limitation
or would have but for action by the
corporation or (B) acquired said shares from
a person described in (A) above by gift,
inheritance or in a transaction in which no
consideration was exchanged; or (y) any
person whose ownership of shares in excess
of the 15% limitation set forth herein is
the result of action taken solely by the
corporation provided that such person shall
be an interested stockholder if thereafter
he acquires additional shares of voting
stock of the corporation, except as a result
of further corporate action not caused,
directly or indirectly, by such person. For
the purpose of determining whether a person
is an interested stockholder, the voting
stock of the corporation deemed to be
outstanding shall include stock deemed to be
owned by the person through application of
paragraph (8) of this subsection but shall
not include any other unissued stock of such
corporation which may be issuable pursuant
to any agreement, arrangement or
understanding, or upon exercise of
conversion rights, warrants or options, or
otherwise,
(6) `person' means any
individual, corporation, partnership,
unincorporated association or other entity.
(7) `voting stock' means stock of
any class or series entitled to vote
generally in the election of directors.
(8) `owner' including the terms
`own' and `owned' when used with respect to
any stock means a person that individually
or with or through any of its affiliates or
associates:
(i) beneficially owns such stock,
directly or indirectly; or
(ii) has (A) the right to acquire
such stock (whether such right is
exercisable immediately or only after the
passage of time) pursuant to any agreement,
arrangement or understanding, or upon the
exercise of conversion rights, exchange
rights, warrants or options, or otherwise;
provided, however, that a person shall not
be deemed the owner of stock tendered
pursuant to a tender or exchange offer made
by such person or any of such person's
affiliates or associates until such tendered
stock is accepted for purchase or exchange;
or (B) the right to vote such stock pursuant
to any agreement, arrangement or
understanding; provided, however, that a
person shall not be deemed the owner of any
stock because of such person's right to vote
such stock if the agreement, arrangement
Page 480
or understanding to vote such stock
arises solely from a revocable proxy or
consent given in response to a proxy or
consent solicitation made to 10 or more
persons; or
(iii) has any agreement,
arrangement or understanding for the purpose
of acquiring, holding, voting (except voting
pursuant to a revocable proxy or consent as
described in item (B) of clause (ii) of the
paragraph), or disposing of such stock with
any other person that beneficially owns, or
whose affiliates or associates beneficially
own, directly or indirectly, such stock.
(d) No provision of a certificate
of incorporation or bylaw shall require, for
any vote of stockholders required by this
section, a greater vote of stockholders than
that specified in this section.
(e) The Court of Chancery is
hereby vested with exclusive jurisdiction to
hear and determine all matters with respect
to this section.
[(f)] The provisions of this Act
are severable and any provision held invalid
shall not affect or impair any of the
remaining provisions of this Act.
SYNOPSIS
Section 203 is intended to strike
a balance between the benefits of an
unfettered market for corporate shares and
the well documented and judicially
recognized need to limit abusive takeover
tactics. To achieve this end, the statue
[sic] will delay for three years business
combinations with acquirors not approved by
the board unless the acquiror is able to
obtain in his offer 85% of the stock as
defined in the statue [sic]. This provision
is intended to encourage a full and fair
offer. Following the principles of corporate
democracy, two-thirds of the stockholders
other than the acquiror may vote or exempt a
given business combination from the
restrictions of the statue [sic]. Any
corporation may decide to opt out the statue
[sic] within 90 days of enactment by action
of its board or, at any time, by action of
its stockholders. The effect of stockholder
action in this regard is delayed for 12
months to avoid circumvention of the statue
[sic].
The statue [sic] is not intended
to alter the case law development of
directors' fiduciary duties of care and
loyalty in responding to challenges to
control or the burden of proof with respect
to compliance with those duties. Nor is the
statue [sic] intended to prevent the use of
any other lawful defensive measure.
Notes:
1. Citations are to the title and section
where the legislation will be codified.
2. During oral argument on March 23,
1988, counsel for BNS also requested that
the Court issue a temporary restraining
order compelling defendant Koppers to give
notice to the plaintiff prior to declaring
an irrevocable dividend. This request was
denied in a ruling from the bench on March
28, 1988.
3. The offer began on March 3rd. Between
March 4th and March 18th, the stock traded
between $49 and $54 7/8.
4. Because it is not yet widely
available, section 203 is reproduced in the
appendix to this opinion. A summary of its
provisions appears in Part II, section A.2
of this opinion.
5. The defendants contend that the
plaintiff has not alleged a justiciable case
or controversy. Article III requires actual
or threatened injury, causation, and
redressability. See Allen v.
Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 751, 104 S.Ct.
3315, 3324, 82 L.Ed.2d 556 (1984). All three
are present. The plaintiff may suffer
injury if the statute and the poison pill
apply. Although the injury is not certain,
it is more than merely conjectural.
Moreover, the injury if it occurs will be
caused by the defendants, and is within the
Court's power to redress. Given the finding
of probable irreparable injury on the
constitutional claim, this argument must
fail.
6. Another portion of Justice White's
opinion, joined only by Chief Justice Burger
and Justices O'Connor and Stevens, analyzed
the statute as invalid because its
jurisdictional scope extended to tender
offers taking place completely beyond the
state's borders and was therefore invalid as
a direct restraint on interstate commerce.
Id. at 641-43, 102 S.Ct. at 2640-41
(opinion of White, J.).
7. See Ind.Code Ann. § 23-1-42
(Burns Supp. 1986); Minn.Stat.Ann. §
302A.671 (West 1985 & Supp.1987);
Mo.Ann.Stat. § 351.407 (Vernon Supp.1987);
Ohio Rev.Code Ann. §§ 1701.831 (Anderson
1985).
8. See, e.g., Md.Corps. & Ass'ns
Code Ann. §§ 3-601 to -603 (1985 &
Supp.1986).
9. See, e.g., Pa.Stat.Ann. tit. 15
§§ 1408(B), 1409(C), 1910 (Purdon
Supp.1986); Me.Rev.Stat. Ann. tit. 13-A, §
910 (Supp.1986); Utah Code Ann. § 16-10-76.5
(Supp.1986).
10. Ind.Code Ann. § 23-1-43 (Burns
Supp.1986); Ky.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 271A.397(3)
(Baldwin Supp. 1986); Mo.Ann.Stat. § 351.459
(Vernon Supp. 1987); N.Y.Bus.Corp. Law §
912(a)(5) (McKinney 1986).
11. See Ind.Code Ann. §§ 23-1-42,
-43 (West Supp.1987); Md.Corps. & Ass'ns
Code Ann. §§ 3-601 to -603 (1985 &
Supp.1986).
12. See Del.Code Ann. 8, § 203(a);
N.Y.Bus.Corp. Law § 912 (McKinney 1986).
13. See Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, §
203(a)(1); Ind. Code Ann. § 23-1-43-18.
14. See Del.Code Ann. tit. 8, §
203(a)(3); Ky.Rev. Stat.Ann. § 271A.397.
15. Delaware's law is less restrictive in
that the moratorium on combinations lasts
only three years rather than five, and in
some of its provisions for avoiding
restrictions on business combinations.
See N.Y.Bus.Corp. Law § 912 (McKinney
1986).
16. The statute defines business
combinations as:
(i) any merger or consolidation
of the corporation or any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
with (A) the interested stockholder, or (B)
with any other corporation if the merger or
consolidation is caused by the interested
stockholder and as a result of such merger
or consolidation subsection (a) of this
section is not applicable to the surviving
corporation;
17. The statute defines an interested
stockholder as:
any person (other than the
corporation and any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the
corporation) that (i) is the owner of 15% or
more of the outstanding voting stock of the
corporation, or (ii) is an affiliate or
associate of the corporation and was the
owner of 15% or more of the outstanding
voting stock of the corporation at any time
within the 3-year period immediately prior
to the date on which it is sought to be
determined whether such person is an
interested stockholder; and the affiliates
and associates of such person; provided,
however, that the term `interested
stockholder' shall not include (x) any
person who (A) owned shares in excess of the
15% limitation set forth herein as of, or
acquired such shares pursuant to a tender
offer commenced prior to, December 23, 1987
or pursuant to an exchange offer announced
prior to the aforesaid date and commenced
within 90 days thereafter and continued to
own shares in excess of such 15% limitation
or would have but for action by the
corporation or (B) acquired said shares from
a person described in (A) above by gift,
inheritance or in a transaction in which no
consideration was exchanged; or (y) any
person whose ownership of shares in excess
of the 15% limitation set forth herein is
the result of action taken solely by the
corporation provided that such person shall
be an interested stockholder if thereafter
he acquires additional shares of voting
stock of the corporation, except as a result
of further corporate action not caused,
directly or indirectly, by such person. For
the purpose of determining whether a person
is an interested stockholder, the voting
stock of the corporation deemed to be
outstanding shall include stock deemed to be
owned by the person through application of
paragraph (8) of this subsection but shall
not include any other unissued stock of such
corporation which may be issuable pursuant
to any agreement, arrangement or
understanding, or upon exercise of
conversion rights, warrants or options, or
otherwise,
18. The law reaches beyond hostile
takeovers, covering almost every situation
in which an investor's equity proportion
rises above 15% without prior board
approval.
19. Subsection (a) of section 203
provides:
(a) Notwithstanding any other
provisions of this chapter, a corporation
shall not engage in any business combination
with any interested stockholder for a period
of 3 years following the date that such
stockholder became an interested
stockholder, unless (1) prior to such date
the board of directors of the corporation
approved either the business combination or
the transaction which resulted in the
stockholder becoming an interested
stockholder, or (2) upon consummation of the
transaction which resulted in the
stockholder becoming an interested
stockholder, the interested stockholder
owned at least 85% of the voting stock of
the corporation outstanding at the time the
transaction commenced, excluding for
purposes of determining the number of shares
outstanding those shares owned (i) by
persons who are directors and also officers
and (ii) employee stock plans in which
employee participants do not have the right
to determine confidentially whether shares
held subject to the plan will be tendered in
a tender or exchange offer, or (3) on or
subsequent to such date the business
combination is approved by the board of
directors and authorized at an annual or
special meeting of stockholders, and not by
written consent, by the affirmative vote of
at least 66 2/3 of the outstanding voting
stock which is not owned by the interested
stockholder.
20. Subsection (b) reads as follows:
(b) The restrictions contained in
this section shall not apply if:
(1) the corporation's original
certificate of incorporation contains a
provision expressly electing not to be
governed by this section;
(2) the corporation, by action of
its board of directors, adopts an amendment
to its bylaws within 90 days of the
effective date of this section expressly
electing not to be governed by this section,
which amendment shall not be further amended
by the board of directors;
(3) the corporation, by action of
its stockholders, adopts an amendment to its
certificate of incorporation or bylaws
expressly electing not to be governed by
this section, provided that, in addition to
any other vote required by law, such
amendment to the certificate of
incorporation or bylaws must be approved by
the affirmative vote of a majority of the
shares entitled to vote. An amendment
adopted pursuant to this paragraph shall not
be effective until 12 months after the
adoption of such amendment and shall not
apply to any business combination between
such corporation and any person who became
an interested stockholder of such
corporation on or prior to such adoption. A
bylaw amendment adopted pursuant to this
paragraph shall not be further amended by
the board of directors;
(4) the corporation does not have
a class of voting stock that is (i) listed
on a national securities exchange, (ii)
authorized for quotation on an inter dealer
quotation system of a registered national
securities association or (iii) held of
record by more than 2,000 stockholders,
unless any of the foregoing results from
action taken, directly or indirectly, by an
interested stockholder or from a transaction
in which a person becomes an interested
stockholder;
(5) a stockholder becomes an
interested stockholder inadvertently and (i)
as soon as practicable divests sufficient
shares so that the stockholder ceases to be
an interested stockholder and (ii) would
not, at any time within the 3 year period
immediately prior to a business combination
between the corporation and such
stockholder, have been an interested
stockholder but for the inadvertent
acquisition; or
(6) the business combination is
proposed prior to the consummation or
abandonment of and subsequent to the earlier
of the public announcement or the notice
required hereunder of a proposed transaction
which (i) constitutes one of the
transactions described in the second
sentence of this paragraph; (ii) is with or
by a person who either was not an interested
stockholder during the previous 3 years or
who became an interested stockholder with
the approval of the corporation's board of
directors; and (iii) is approved or not
opposed by a majority of the members of the
board of directors then in office (but not
less than 1) who were directors prior to any
person becoming an interested stockholder
during the previous 3 years or were
recommended for election or elected to
succeed such directors. The proposed
transactions referred to in the preceding
sentence are limited to (x) a merger or
consolidation of the corporation (except for
a merger in respect of which, pursuant to
section 251 of this chapter, no vote of the
stockholders of the corporation is
required); (y) a sale, lease, exchange,
mortgage, pledge, transfer or other
disposition (in one transaction or a series
of transactions), whether as part of a
dissolution or otherwise, of assets of the
corporation or of any direct or indirect
majority-owned subsidiary of the corporation
(other than to any direct or indirect
wholly-owned subsidiary or to the
corporation) having an aggregate market
value equal to 50% or more of either that
aggregate market value of all of the assets
of the corporation determined on a
consolidatedbasis or the aggregate market
value of all the outstanding stock of the
corporation; or (z) a proposed tender or
exchange offer for 50% or more of the
outstanding voting stock of the corporation.
The corporation shall give not less than 20
days notice to all interested stockholders
prior to the consummation of any of the
transactions described in clauses (x) or (y)
of the second sentence of the paragraph.
Notwithstanding paragraphs (1), (2), (3) and
(4) of this subsection, a corporation may
elect by a provision of its original
certificate of incorporation or any
amendment thereto to be governed by this
section, provided that any such amendment to
the certificate of incorporation shall not
apply to restrict a business combination
between the corporation and an interested
stockholder of the corporation if the
interested stockholder became such prior to
the effective date of the amendment.
21. Governor Castle signed the
legislation on February 2, 1988.
22. Hearings at 57 (remarks of A.
Gilchrist Sparks, Chairman of the Delaware
State Bar Association's Corporation Law
Section). The purpose of the legislation
also is laid out in the synopsis. See
appendix at 476-480. See also supra
n. 31, discussing the legislative history of
the act.
23. A freezeout occurs when a controlling
shareholder forces minority shareholders to
surrender their shares in exchange for cash
or debt securities. Without fair price or
other protection, a corporation's
shareholders could be pressured into
surrendering their shares in the first stage
of a tender offer, for fear that a second
stage freezeout at a lower price will
follow. This coercive aspect of
"front-loaded" two-step, or two-tier offers,
provides a significant amount of the current
momentum toward and justification for state
legislation regulating takeovers. See,
e.g., Transcript of Hearing Before the
Delaware General Assembly, House and Senate
Judiciary Committees, Jan. 20-21, 1988, at
44-45 (D.I. 26) (question by Representative
David Ennis) [hereinafter "Hearings"];
Impact of Corporate Takeovers: Hearings
Before the Subcomm. on Securities of the
Senate Comm. on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs, 99th Cong., 1st Sess. 379-80,
469 (1985) (study by Office of the Chief
Economist of the SEC) [hereinafter "Impact
Hearings"].
24. It is worth noting that the Delaware
statute does allow a successful bidder to
exercise all other aspects of control save
business combinations.
25. Section 203(a)(1). Most initially
hostile tender offers are eventually
negotiated. See Impact Hearings at
367-68.
26. The statute excludes ESOPs which do
not allow participating employees to
determine confidentially whether the ESOP
shares will be tendered in a tender or
exchange offer.
27. The Court notes the irony of the
defendant Koppers's position here compared
to its position before the federal court in
Los Angeles, where Koppers has intervened in
a proceeding between BNS and the federal
government concerning antitrust implications
of the proposed takeover. The California
litigation has provoked Koppers to argue
that BNS will be unable to take control of
Koppers, in part because of the well
documented "five percent" of shareholders
that do not respond to any tender offer,
regardless of price. This phenomenon of 5%
of shareholders not responding, along with
Koppers management and directors' holdings
of 3.4%, effectively prevents BNS, according
to Koppers, from purchasing 90% of the
outstanding shares of Koppers. See
Excerpt from Morrow & Co. aff., quoted in
the letter of March 28, 1988, from Edwin B.
Mishkin to this Court. In this litigation,
however, a tender offer resulting in 85%
ownership, in order to avoid the statute, is
lauded by Koppers as a perfectly reasonable
requirement. See Groth Aff., 6
(D.I. 30). Given the management's ownership
of 3.4% and the fact that 5% of shareholders
make no response to a tender offer, the
reality is BNS must receive 92% of the
remaining outstanding shares to navigate the
second escape route.
28. CTS, 107 S.Ct. at 1648-49.
29. Id. at 1649.
30. Id. at 1649-52.
31. The legislative history of the
Delaware Act reflects a mixed bag of
motives. Prominent among these was the
legislative perception that takeover tactics
employed by individuals such as T. Boone
Pickens and Carl Icahn were harmful to
stockholders and target corporations.
See, e.g., Hearings at 7-9 (testimony of
Michael Harkins, Secretary of State of the
State of Delaware). No less prominent,
however, was the worry that failure to enact
a anti-takeover law would jeopardize the
$170 million in franchise taxes and fees,
currently representing 17% of gross state
revenues, which Delaware receives each year
from corporations appreciative of the
state's corporate law policies. See,
e.g., Hearings at 2 (testimony of
Representative Charles Hebner), 6 (testimony
of Secretary Michael Harkins), 60-62
(testimony of A. Gilchrist Sparks). The
testimony before the joint judiciary
committees of the Delaware legislature is
replete with references to revenues, but
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