| Page 835 710 A.2d 835
John WINSTON, Plaintiff,
v.
Leonard S. MANDOR, Robert A. Mandor, Joan
Levine, Harvey
Jacobson, Gregory McMahon and Geoffrey S.
Aaronson, Milestone Properties, Inc. and
Concord Assets Group, Inc., Defendants.
Nos. 14807, 15416. Court of Chancery of Delaware,
New Castle County. Submitted: April 15, 1997.
Decided: May 12, 1997.
Page 836
Joseph A. Rosenthal of Rosenthal,
Monhait Gross & Goddess, Wilmington;
Silverman, Harnes & Harnes, New York City,
of counsel, for Plaintiff.
Michael Hanrahan and Daniel P.
Conneen of Prickett, Jones, Elliott, Kristol
& Schnee, Wilmington; Robert W. Gottlieb,
and Joel A. Yunis of Rosenman & Colin,
L.L.P., New York City, of counsel, for
Defendants.
OPINION
STEELE, Vice Chancellor.
I. Issue Presented
Do controlling stockholders who
effectuate the sale of a significant portion
of corporate assets, and thereafter
distribute the proceeds as a dividend to the
common stockholders owe fiduciary duties vis
a vis these transactions to the
corporation's preferred stockholders? I
conclude they do not owe fiduciary duties if
the transactions are specifically
contemplated by the corporate certificate of
designations. I further conclude, however,
that the corporation, like any contracting
party, must interpret and apply the
applicable provisions in the certificate in
good faith.
II. Background
1
Plaintiff is the holder of 3100
shares of Series A Preferred Stock of
Milestone Properties, Inc. He brings suit on
behalf of all non-defendant holders of the
preferred shares against Milestone, each of
its individual directors, and Concord Assets
Group, Inc. The gravamen of the several
complaints filed in these actions is that
two of the Milestone directors, Leonard and
Robert Mandor, by their control of
Milestone's affairs, caused it to engage in
a series of related transactions
particularly designed to advantage the
Mandors
Page 837 to the distinct disadvantage of Milestone's
preferred stockholders.
Leonard Mandor is the chairman of
the Milestone board of directors and its
chief executive officer. Robert Mandor is
also on Milestone's board and is its
president and chief operating officer.
Before the transactions complained of here,
the two beneficially owned 436,000 shares,
or 35.8%, of Milestone common stock. By
virtue of their positions and stock
ownership, it is alleged the Mandors
exercised control over the company. It is
further alleged that the four other members
of Milestone's board were, by reason of
their respective relationships with the
Mandors, similarly controlled. Joan LeVine,
a member of the board and officer of the
company, and her husband who is also an
officer of Milestone, both owe their
continuing positions at Milestone to the
Mandors; Geoffrey Aaronson is an attorney
who has represented the Mandors and their
business interests; Harvey Jacobson was
indebted to the Mandors for $500,000 at the
time of the transactions; and Gregory
McMahon is an accountant who has performed
tax and other services for the Mandors.
McMahon was nominated to the board by the
Mandors, but elected by the preferred
stockholders.
Before October of 1995,
Milestone's primary assets and business were
the ownership and management of sixteen
commercial properties. These properties
consisted of single tenant buildings and
shopping centers. The first of two closely
related transactions complained of by the
preferred stockholders concerns Concord
Assets. A company wholly owned by the
Mandors, Concord is also in the commercial
real estate business. Prior to the
below-described transactions, Concord's
assets consisted of three shopping centers
and 35 subordinated notes and mortgages held
on 32 other shopping centers. The three
shopping centers are heavily indebted and,
it is alleged, have insufficient cash flow
to meet both mortgage and maintenance/repair
obligations. The single tenant at one of the
three is in bankruptcy and is not generating
sufficient income to meet even the property
mortgage obligations. The mortgages on this
property and one of the other two were
personally guaranteed by the Mandors.
The notes and mortgages were held
by Concord by reason of its promotion of
real estate tax shelters. The shopping
centers were purchased with mortgage money
by Concord or other Mandor affiliated
entities and then sold to limited
partnerships organized by them in return for
cash and the notes. The notes carried with
them the obligation to pay the primary
mortgage and maintenance/repair expenses and
the right to receive any remaining income.
It is alleged that cash flow on five of the
properties was insufficient to meet the
mortgage obligations, and that none of the
properties generated sufficient cash flow to
meet both mortgage and maintenance/repair
expenses.
The complaints attack several
Milestone actions that, depending upon one's
point of view, should be seen as a series of
separate transactions or as a series of
steps in one transaction.
2
The first transaction was the sale of the
Concord assets to Milestone in return for
$500,000 cash and 2,544,654 shares of newly
issued Milestone common stock. This boosted
the Mandor's beneficial holdings to
approximately 80% of outstanding common
shares. The second transaction was a
spin-off of the sixteen original Milestone
properties to a subsidiary (Union Properties
Investors, Inc.) in return for newly issued
UPI common and preferred shares. The third
was the distribution of the newly issued UPI
shares to Milestone's common stockholders in
the form of a dividend.
3
These transactions were
instituted according to a plan developed by
LSG Advisors, an investment banking firm
retained by Milestone. The Milestone board
established the Related Party Transaction
Committee to evaluate the fairness of the
plan. This committee
Page 838 was comprised of Aaronson, Jacobson and
McMahon from Milestone's board and a group
of professional advisors. It is alleged that
nearly all of these firms, like the
directors, had ties to the Mandors,
Milestone and/or Concord. LSG, the
committee's financial advisor, was on
monthly retainer to Milestone, was to
receive a $310,000 fee on completion of the
UPI spin-off, and was allegedly promised
future work. The committee received its
legal advice from a firm defending Concord
in suits by some of its limited partnership
groups.
LSG's plan was approved by the
Milestone board in February 1995, and
described in proxy materials sent to
Milestone stockholders in September 1995.
The proxy statement notified the
stockholders of a special meeting at which
they would be asked to approve of the
purchase by Milestone of the Concord assets.
The proxy statement also notified the
stockholders that, subject to approval of
this transaction, the UPI transaction would
be completed. The common stockholders
approved the plan and it was completed in
October 1995. Preferred stockholders were
not entitled to vote on the transactions.
Plaintiff brought suit in January
1996, and by an amended complaint alleged
violation of 8 Del.C. § 271, for Milestone's
failure to subject the UPI transactions to a
stockholder vote; breach of several
provisions of rights of the preferred
stockholders contained in the certificate of
designations; and breach of the fiduciary
duty of loyalty. The amended complaint
sought rescission of the UPI
transactions--relief which was foreclosed by
the granting, in part, of defendants' motion
to dismiss.
4
While the remainder of defendant's motion
was sub judice, plaintiff filed a second
complaint and sought dismissal, without
prejudice, of the first. The factual
allegations of the second complaint are
substantially similar, though it adds as
post hoc support, details of the recent sale
of the once Milestone/more recently UPI
properties to a real estate investment
trust. The second complaint contains only a
single claim for breach of fiduciary duty.
Defendants now have moved to dismiss the
second complaint or, in the alternative, to
stay all proceedings in the second action
until resolution of the first. Pending,
therefore, is the remainder of defendants'
motion to dismiss the first complaint,
plaintiff's petition to dismiss it (without
prejudice), and defendants' motion to
dismiss or stay the second complaint.
III. Discussion
Oral argument was heard on 15
April 1997, and on 16 April I issued an
order consolidating the two cases for
purposes of deciding all pending motions.
Plaintiff's claims are addressed in the
order presented by the amended complaint of
the earlier filed action.
A. Section 271
Section 271 requires majority
shareholder vote of approval before the
corporation may "sell, lease or exchange all
or substantially all of its property and
assets[.]"
5
Plaintiff contends the UPI transactions
constituted such an event, and that no vote
was held. The proxy does not appear to seek
approval, at least on the face of the
selective portions submitted with the
current motions, for the exchange (or
"transfer") of the original Milestone
properties. And the Proxy
Statement--Information Statement expressly
states that "Stockholder approval of the
distribution is not required and we are not
asking you for a proxy and you are requested
not to send us a proxy with respect
thereto."
6
Defendants raise three arguments
in opposition to plaintiff's contention: 1)
distribution of assets to a subsidiary
corporation is not a
Page 839 sale, lease or exchange under the terms of
section 271; 2) the distribution did not
include, in any event, all or substantially
all of Milestone's assets; and 3) since the
preferred stockholders were not entitled to
vote on the transaction, plaintiff has no
standing to assert a claim under this
section. Since the last of the three raises
a threshold jurisdictional issue, I address
it first.
Fundamentally, determination of a
plaintiff's standing to sue for a statutory
violation must be made by reference to the
provision at issue.
7
The statute here at issue indicates a
corporation may sell or otherwise dispose of
its assets "as authorized by a resolution
adopted by a majority of the outstanding
stock of the corporation entitled to vote
thereon[.]"
8 It
follows that only persons so entitled may
complain about a violation of the statute.
This is not to say that the same events may
not cause some other harm; only that the
non-voting plaintiff may not seek redress on
the basis the statute is violated.
Plaintiff's standing turns, therefore, on
whether he would have been entitled to vote
on the UPI spin-off and distribution,
assuming such a vote were required by
section 271.
As a starting proposition, all of
the corporation's shares are equal and
entitle the holders to enjoy the same
attendant rights and privileges.
9 The corporation may
limit the rights (including the right to
vote) of holders of a preferred or other
particular class of shares by express
limitation in its certificate of
incorporation, a specific certificate of
designations or other form of resolution.
10 When the
corporation so chooses, the shareholders'
rights are circumscribed as set forth in
that instrument.
11
In the present case, therefore, the question
of plaintiff's standing may be resolved by
looking to the "Certificate of Designations
of $.78 Convertible Series A Preferred Stock
of Milestone Properties Inc." (the
"Certificate").
12
"Except as set forth in
subparagraphs (b) and (c) of this paragraph
5 or otherwise required by law, holders of
Series A Preferred Stock shall have no right
to vote at, or participate in, any meeting
of stockholders[.]"
13
Neither of the subparagraph exceptions are
applicable to the immediate issue. Thus,
unless the vote of the preferred
shareholders was legally required, plaintiff
would not have been entitled to vote, and
does not have standing to challenge
Milestone's failure to seek shareholder
approval of the UPI transactions. Plaintiff
has not cited, nor am I aware of, any such
legal obligation.
This should end the matter, but
plaintiff argues that defendant's failure to
obtain approval from shareholders entitled
to vote is "a violation of a fundamental
statutory right[.]" As I interpret this
argument, it is that anyone alleging harm
from the acts on which the vote allegedly
should have been taken must have standing to
sue for violation of section 271. This
alleged fundamental right, and what one
might extrapolate as the underlying
corporation law policy of full stockholder
participation in any such transaction,
Page 840 is only and best served, plaintiff argues,
by an inclusive rather than exclusive
application of the standing doctrine. In
support of this argument plaintiff cites
what he claims is an analogous case, Kaplan
v. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co.
14 In that case, a
derivative plaintiff challenged the
defendant's standing to raise as a defense
the plaintiff's failure to comply with the
demand requirements of Court of Chancery
Rule 23.1. Vice-Chancellor Jacobs turned
first to the important governance issues and
policies underlying the demand requirement,
concluding they would be better served by
allowing a non-corporate defendant to assert
the defense.
15
Section 271 defines the class of
persons it wishes to protect by requiring
the vote of those shareholders entitled to
vote as opposed to all shareholders.
Additionally, the underlying corporation law
policy is better served in this instance by
restricting standing to sue under section
271 to this class. That is, a Delaware
corporation may structure the rights and
obligations by and among itself and its
shareholders through the issuance of special
classes of stock. Where not otherwise
prohibited by statute or public policy, the
corporation may limit or expand such rights
as it sees fit. Section 212 of the Delaware
General Corporation Law embodies this
policy, and the language of section 271
reflects it by requiring the approval of
voting shareholders rather than shareholders
more generally.
I conclude plaintiff has no
standing to sue for violation of section
271. Accordingly, this claim is dismissed.
B. Breach of the Certificate
Plaintiff claims the exchange of
the original Milestone properties to its
subsidiary UPI and the subsequent
distribution of UPI shares to the Milestone
common shareholders triggers two provisions
in the Certificate. Under the first
provision, subsection 6(d), plaintiff
allegedly has the right to convert his
preferred shares into UPI shares. Under the
second, subsection 6(b)(3), plaintiff is
entitled to a good faith conversion
adjustment valuation.
16
Defendant disputes the UPI transaction
triggers subsection 6(d), and disputes
plaintiff got anything less than what is
called for by subsection 6(b)(3).
The Certificate, setting forth
the rights and obligations between plaintiff
and Milestone with respect to these claims,
defines the relationship as a contractual
one.
17
Plaintiff's claims thus sound in contract.
In order to survive a motion to dismiss,
plaintiff must demonstrate the existence of
the contract, breach thereof and resultant
damage.
18 There
being no dispute about the first of these
elements, I proceed to the second.
1. Section 6(d)
As with any contractual dispute,
the starting point is the language of the
contract. In relevant part, subsection (d)
of section 6 states:
Consolidation or Merger. In case of ...
the sale, transfer or other disposition of
all or substantially all of the property,
assets or business of the Corporation as a
result of which sale, transfer or other
disposition, property other than cash shall
be payable or distributable to the holders
of the Common Stock, each share of Series A
Preferred Stock shall thereafter be
convertible into the number and class or
series of shares or other securities or
property of the Corporation, ... to which
such sale, transfer or other disposition
shall have been made, to which the Common
Stock otherwise issuable upon conversion of
such share of Series A Preferred Stock would
have been entitled upon such ... sale,
transfer or other disposition if outstanding
at the time thereof[.]
Page 841
As I read the provision, it
grants the preferred shareholders the right,
but does not impose the obligation, to
convert their preferred shares into a new
security in the event Milestone transfers or
otherwise disposes of substantially all of
its assets and distributes the resulting
proceeds, in a form other than cash, to the
common stockholders. Plaintiff argues the
UPI transactions fall squarely within the
parameters of the provision. Defendants pose
several very different understandings of the
transactions and subsection 6(d).
Defendants' first argument begins
with notion that the exchange of the
original Milestone properties for the UPI
shares is a transaction wholly separate from
subsequent distribution of UPI shares to the
common stockholders. Considered
independently, defendants argue, neither
transaction triggers subsection 6(d). Thus,
"[t]he distribution simply put properties
into UPI--it did not make the UPI stock
payable or distributable to the holders of
Milestone common stock[;]" and "a dividend
paid to Milestone's common stockholders is
not a sale, transfer or other disposition of
Milestone property that triggers the
anti-destruction clause of Section 6(d)."
19
Defendants rely upon the doctrine
of "independent legal significance," which
holds that acts of the corporation taken in
compliance with the provisions of one
section of our General Corporation Law need
not be tested against the requirements of
another, though the result be the same.
20 I begin by
assuming, for the sake of argument, the
relevance of this doctrine to the
Certificate provision.
21
Defendants' application of the doctrine to
these transactions is as follows: The
distribution of the Milestone properties to
UPI in exchange for UPI common and preferred
stock is authorized and in compliance with
the provisions of 8 Del. C. §§ 122(4), 123;
22 the
distribution of the UPI shares to the
Milestone common shareholders is authorized
by 8 Del. C. §§ 170, 173;
23
that one or the other or both of Milestone's
actions may constitute a sale of assets
under 8 Del. C. § 271 is therefore not
relevant.
There are two immediate
difficulties with this argument. First,
whether statutory provisions defining the
outer limits of a Delaware corporation's
authority may be relied upon to avoid other
statutory provisions placing limits on the
manner in which those powers may be
exercised, is an uncomfortable proposition.
For example: If defendants' reliance upon
section 122(4) is proper and sufficient in
this instance, when must a corporation
comply with the requirements of section 271?
24 Second, it is
not altogether clear nor am I prepared to
resolve, from the face of the selective
proxy materials submitted with the motions,
all factual circumstances necessary to
determine definitively whether the events
must be considered as one or more
transactions. Accordingly, for the remainder
of the discussion I accept plaintiff's
assertion that the UPI transactions
constitute a single transaction in
satisfaction of subsection 6(d) of the
Certificate.
Defendants' second argument is
that subsection 6(d) "is only triggered in
the event that the common stock into which
the preferred stock would normally convert
[is]
Page 842 no longer in existence."
25
Since Milestone common shares remain in
existence defendants conclude plaintiff has
no right to convert into UPI shares. In
support, defendants rely primarily on Wood
v. Coastal States Gas Corp.
26
Coastal States involved a
challenge by preferred shareholders to a
complex litigation settlement. As part of
the settlement, the parent company, Coastal
States Gas Corp., spun off a significant
subsidiary business, giving minority amounts
of its common and preferred stock to a
trust, and distributing the remainder to
Coastal's common stockholders. Plaintiffs in
Coastal States, holders of Coastal preferred
shares, brought suit under a similar
certificate anti-dilution/-destruction
provision, charging that the spin-off was
part of a recapitalization. The Supreme
Court affirmed a post-trial Court of
Chancery conclusion that the spin-off was
not a recapitalization within the meaning of
the provision.
27
In so doing, the Supreme Court agreed with
the Court of Chancery that "[s]ince the
Coastal shares will continue in being after
the spin-off, ... the plan is not a
recapitalization within the meaning of the
Certificate."
28
In reaching this conclusion, both focused on
the language of the certificate: "In the
event that the Corporation shall be
recapitalized, ...[the] Preferred Stock may
thereafter receive in lieu of the Common
Stock otherwise issuable to him upon
conversion...."
29
Defendants point to similar language in the
Milestone Certificate and would have me
extrapolate a bright line rule: such
provisions are not triggered unless the
common stock is extinguished by the event at
issue.
I do not read Coastal States to
stand for such an expansive proposition.
Coastal States decided that the common stock
must be extinguished before the event could
be considered a recapitalization under the
language of that certificate. It did not
decide that similar language must be read as
sine qua non rule applicable to such
provisions generally. The Supreme Court's
decision goes no further than to affirm the
Court of Chancery's finding that, for
purposes of interpreting that particular
anti-dilution/-destruction clause, a
recapitalization not extinguishing the
common shares or otherwise involving an
immediate threat to the preferred shares
does not trigger the provision.
30 As such, Coastal States
does not control the result in this case.
This conclusion does not,
however, answer the more immediate relevant
question whether the similar language in the
Milestone Certificate may be read to impose
such a requirement in the context of a sale
of assets. I do not find any such
precondition in subsection 6(d). The
language in the Milestone Certificate
similar to that of the certificate in
Coastal States reads: "... each share of
Series A Preferred Stock shall thereafter be
convertible into the number and class or
series of shares [of the new corporation]
... to which the Common Stock otherwise
issuable upon conversion of such share of
Series A Preferred Stock would have been
entitled upon such ... sale, transfer or
other disposition if outstanding at the time
thereof[.]" I do not read this language as
imposing a sub silentio requirement that the
common stock must be extinguished before the
subsection comes into play. Rather, the
language spells out the means by which the
shares (or other securities) of the new
corporation are to be measured against the
original common shares (extant or not) for
the purposes of conversion. Even if this
were not clear from the very language quoted
above and the terms of the provision
generally, though I find it to be, this
reading is the most logical. A transaction
in which the corporation sells all or
substantially all of its assets, as opposed
to a merger (or perhaps a recapitalization),
surely includes the possibility that the
corporation or some part of it survives, and
so too its shares.
Page 843
The remaining question regarding
plaintiff's claim for breach of subsection
6(d) is whether Milestone has sold "all or
substantially all" of its assets. Since I
find no commonly accepted definition, and
since 8 Del.C. § 271 uses the same phrase, I
look to the case law interpreting the
section for guidance. The Supreme Court has
long held that determination of whether
there is a sale of substantially all assets
so as to trigger section 271 depends upon
the particular qualitative and quantitative
characteristics of the transaction at issue.
31 Thus, the
transaction must be viewed in terms of its
overall effect on the corporation, and there
is no necessary quantifying percentage.
32 Such an enquiry
is factual in nature, requiring acceptance
of plaintiff's well pleaded allegations over
defendants' contradictory contentions.
Plaintiff alleges Milestone has
sold substantially all of its assets from
both a qualitative and a quantitative view.
Qualitatively, Milestone's primary business
is now the holding of real estate related
securities and mortgages rather than the
ownership and management of real property.
Additionally, for the six months ending June
1995, the sixteen original Milestone
properties constituted its only
income-generating assets. On the numbers,
plaintiff claims these properties
represented 60% of Milestone's net assets,
prior to the Concord acquisition. Defendants
dispute plaintiff's numerical calculations
and argue that "Milestone remains engaged in
various real estate related activities."
33 Despite
defendants' invitation to resolve both
necessary aspects of the enquiry on the face
of their selective proxy package
attachments, I decline to do so. Plaintiff's
allegations are more than merely conclusory,
and so the present motions are not
appropriate for the determination of which
parties' financial presentations and
characterizations more accurately measure
the value of the properties or transactions.
Accordingly, defendants' motion to dismiss
plaintiff's claim for breach of subsection
6(d) of the Certificate is denied.
2. Subsection 6(b)(3)
This provision of the Certificate
provides that upon distribution of other
than a cash dividend to the common
stockholders, preferred stockholders are
entitled to an adjustment of their
conversion ratio. In other words, the
preferred holders are entitled to convert
their shares to an increased number of
common shares reflecting (in some measure)
the assets of the corporation given to the
common holders. The adjustment must be made
according to a formula, one variable of
which is the "fair market value (as
determined by the Board of Directors of the
Corporation, whose determination shall be
conclusive) of the portion of the assets ...
so distributed[.]"
34
Following the distribution of the UPI common
stock to the Milestone common stockholders,
Milestone made such an adjustment. Plaintiff
claims, however,
Page 844 that Milestone was required to make its fair
market value determination in good faith and
did not do so. Defendants raise two
arguments against this claim. The first is
that the scope of plaintiff's rights and
Milestone's obligations under this provision
are determined by its language, and the
language provides that the Milestone board's
determination is conclusive. The second of
the arguments is that, even if the provision
contains an implicit requirement to
recalculate the conversion ratio in good
faith, plaintiff has not pleaded sufficient
allegations to sustain such a charge.
I reject defendants' first
argument altogether. It is a fundamental
tenet of contract law that a party must
perform their obligations in good faith.
35 The second
question requires only a moderately more
lengthy discussion. This is because in
Desert Equities, Inc. v. Morgan Stanley
Levg'd Equity Fund, II, L.P., our Supreme
Court held that "[s]ince bad faith is an
issue of fact, the issue cannot be resolved
on pleadings which, on their face, allege
bad faith."
36
After concluding that allegations of bad
faith need not meet the heightened pleading
standards of Court of Chancery Rule 9(b),
the Court reinstated plaintiff's claim that
the defendant general partner had not acted
in good faith in its execution of a
partnership agreement provision.
37 The relevant part of
plaintiff's complaint, quoted in full in the
Supreme Court opinion, contained only facts
related to the alleged act taken in bad
faith, and a plausible motivation for it.
38 Plaintiff in
this case has fulfilled these requirements.
Plaintiff alleges that Milestone's
determination of the fair value of the UPI
common stock distributed to its common
stockholders was not made in good faith,
that it chose an interested party to perform
the valuation, and that the controlling
shareholders of Milestone would benefit by
an undervaluing of the distributed assets.
It is certainly true, as
defendants argue, that they are not required
to follow or perform any particular
valuation procedure, and may choose whatever
firm they wish. However, whatever method
they choose they must do it with the same
fairness and decency as is incumbent upon
all contracting parties. It is also true
that the terms of subsection 6(b)(3) clearly
limit the assets subject to fair market
valuation to those distributed to the
Milestone common stockholders. As such, it
is the UPI common stock alone that Milestone
is required to fairly value. Though any fair
valuation of the UPI common stock may
require consideration of the UPI preferred
stock held by Milestone and/or the value of
any assets then held by UPI, defendants are
not required to employ plaintiff's valuation
criteria or methodology, so long as they
fulfill this part of the bargain in good
faith. Defendant's motion to dismiss
plaintiff's claim for breach of subsection
6(b)(3) of the Certificate is denied.
C. Breach of Fiduciary Duty
Plaintiff alleges several claims
for breach of fiduciary duty in its two
complaints. The amended complaint in the
first action contains two claims under this
rubric. The first is that the Concord and
UPI transactions were timed so as to benefit
the common stockholders at the expense of
the preferred stockholders. The second is
that the interestedness of the Mandors and
the board committee imposed upon them a duty
of entire fairness vis a vis all Milestone
stockholders other than the Mandors. As to
the second complaint, I agree with
defendants that the single fiduciary duty
claim adds nothing other than a more
succinct recitation of the same theories,
and therefore address it with those of the
first action. For reasons apparent from the
discussion immediately following, I address
the claims by transaction rather than cause
of action.
1. UPI transactions
Before considering whether
plaintiff has sufficiently alleged a breach
of fiduciary duty with respect to the UPI
transactions, the necessary preliminary
question
Page 845 of the existence of the duty must be
answered. As noted above, the corporation's
duties and obligations to preferred
stockholders include fiduciary
responsibilities where their acts extend
beyond the bounds of the contractual
relationship created by the certificate.
39 When, however,
the corporate actions complained of are
expressly contemplated by a certificate, the
duties and obligations of the corporation
and its preferred stockholders are governed
exclusively by their contract.
40 And so it is here.
The UPI transactions, no matter
what aspects plaintiff chooses to highlight,
involved the sale of Milestone assets in
return for UPI stock, most of which was
given as a dividend to the Milestone's
common stockholders. The contractual
provisions discussed above deal squarely
with plaintiff's rights and remedies for
these acts.
41
As discussed, however, Milestone
has an obligation to interpret and apply
those provisions fairly. Thus, as plaintiff
properly points out,
42
the transactions may not be structured so as
to circumvent or render meaningless the
protections afforded by the Certificate.
43 Any claim for
the breach of such obligation, however, is
contractual rather than fiduciary. Thus,
with respect to claims attacking the UPI
transactions, plaintiff's remedy must come
by challenge to defendants compliance with
the provisions of the Certificate.
2. The Concord transaction
The starting point of the
transactions discussed above was Milestone's
purchase of certain Concord assets in
exchange for newly issued Milestone common
stock. Plaintiff asserts that the value of
the stock Milestone issued in payment for
the Concord assets greatly exceeded what
Milestone received in return. The effect of
the exchange, plaintiff argues, was to
improperly dilute the value of all Milestone
stock, common and preferred.
I agree with defendants that this
must be considered a derivative claim. The
crux of these allegations is that Milestone
overpaid for the Concord assets. This
alleges waste of corporate assets, and as
such is a classic derivative claim.
44 Despite plaintiff's
contrary assertions, all Milestone
stockholders were similarly injured.
45
Because plaintiff's complaints do
not contain the necessary allegations to
pursue this claim, it is dismissed.
Plaintiff is, however, granted leave to
amend the surviving complaint accordingly,
should he wish to do so.
IV. Conclusion
Following from the conclusions
above, plaintiff's remaining claims are
contractual, and thus solely against
Milestone rather than its directors or
Concord. Plaintiff's statutory and fiduciary
duty claims are dismissed. Plaintiff's
claims for breach of the Certificate may be
maintained. Accordingly, defendants' motion
to dismiss the first-filed complaint (C.A.
No. 14807) is granted in part and denied in
part. Defendants' motion to dismiss the
second-filed complaint (C.A. No. 15416) is
granted.
1 In deciding a motion to dismiss, all
non-conclusory factual allegations found on
the face of the complaint and any reasonable
inferences therefrom are assumed to be true.
See Grobow v. Perot, Del.Supr., 539 A.2d
180, 187 (1988). Because the two
above-referenced actions are consolidated
for the purposes of deciding the pending
motion to dismiss in each, the facts are
drawn from each of the two complaints
without specific reference, except where
necessary.
2 For the sake of convenience only, I
will refer to each event as a "transaction".
I need not nor do I decide, at present,
whether these "transactions" are separate
and independent transactions or parts of a
single transaction.
3 Again for the sake of convenience, I
will refer to the Milestone property/UPI
share exchange and the distribution of UPI
shares to the Milestone common stockholders
collectively as the "UPI transactions."
4 See Winston v. Mandor, Del.Ch., C.A.
No. 14807, Steele, V.C., (Oct. 25, 1996),
Mem.Op.
5 8 Del.C. § 271 (1983) ("Sale, lease or
exchange of assets; consideration;
procedure.").
6 Notice and proxy statement attached as
Exh. A to Pl.'s Mem. in Opp. to Defs.' Mot.
to Dismiss [Pl.'s First Cmpl.] ("Pl.'s Mem.
in Opp. 1"). Documents appended to the
parties' briefs in support or in opposition
to a motion to dismiss are properly
considered if they are incorporated by
reference in the complaint or if not relied
upon for the truth of their contents. See
Vanderbilt Income Growth Assocs., L.L.C. v.
Arvida/JMB Mgrs., Inc. Del.Supr., 691 A.2d
609, 612-13 (1996).
7 See, e.g., Oceanport Indus., Inc. v.
Wilmington Stevedores, Inc., Del.Supr., 636
A.2d 892, 900 (1994) (standing to appeal
decision of administrative agency hinges on
interpretation of statutory language
conferring right to do so).
8 8 Del. C. § 271.
9
Shanghai Power Co. v. Delaware Trust Co.,
Del. Ch., 316 A.2d 589, 593 (1974). See
also 8 Del.C. § 212(a) (1983) ("Voting
rights of stockholders; proxies;
limitations.").
10 See 8 Del.C. § 151(a).
11 See Moore Bus. Forms, Inc. v. Cordant
Holdings Corp., Del. Ch., C.A. No. 13911,
Jacobs, V.C. (Nov. 2, 1995).
12 Attached as Exh. A to Defs.' Opening
Brief in Support of their Motion to Dismiss
[pl.'s first complaint] ("Defs.' Op. Br.
1"). As stated in note 6, above, review of
documents incorporated in the complaint is
appropriate on a motion to dismiss. Because
the rights attendant to ownership of
Milestone preferred stock are set forth in
the Certificate and several of the
plaintiff's claims rely upon its provisions,
I consider the Certificate integral to and
thus incorporated into the complaints. See
Vanderbilt Income, supra, at 612-13;
In re Santa Fe Pacific Corp. Shareholder
Litig., Del.Supr., 669 A.2d 59, 69-70 (1995).
I consider the Certificate, however, only to
the extent it is clear and unambiguous, and
will not resolve issues of construction (if
any there be) on the present motion.
13 Certificate p 5(a).
14 Del.Ch., 529 A.2d 254 (1987), aff'd in
part and rev'd in part, 540 A.2d 726 (1988).
15 Id. at 259.
16 I do not agree with defendants that
plaintiff's assertion of claims for breach
of both provisions are inconsistent. As more
fully described below, subsection 6(d) is
elective, and thus, in some circumstances,
either right will be available.
17 See Jedwab v. MGM Grand Hotels, Inc.,
Del.Ch., 509 A.2d 584, 593 (1986).
18 Moore Bus. Forms, supra, at 7.
19 Defs.' Op.Br. 1 at 23, 24.
20 See Orzeck v. Englehart, Del.Supr.,
195 A.2d 375, 377 (1963).
21 I make this assumption as a practical
expedient, because neither parties'
subsection 6(d) arguments are otherwise
predicated.
22 In relevant part, section 122 and its
subsection 4 read: "Every corporation
created under this chapter shall have power
to: ... sell, convey, lease, exchange,
transfer or otherwise dispose of, or
mortgage or pledge, all or any of its
property and assets, or any interest
therein[.]" Section 123, generally speaking,
provides that a Delaware corporation shall
have the authority to buy, sell, receive,
and etc., the stock or securities of another
corporation, and to exercise and/or fulfill
all attendant rights and/or obligations.
23 Both sections describe and define the
corporation's authority to declare and pay
dividends.
24 But see Orzeck, supra, 195 A.2d 375
(shell corporation may purchase all shares
of several independent corporations without
complying with merger statute requirements
where all corporations retained independent
identities and where authority is otherwise
conferred by section 123 per doctrine of
independent legal significance).
25 Id. at 25.
26 Del.Supr., 401 A.2d 932 (1979).
27 Id. at 940.
28 Id. at 939.
29 Id. at 938; Wood v. Coastal States Gas
Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 5719, Hartnett,
V.C. (Nov. 9, 1978).
30 See Coastal States, 401 A.2d at 940.
31 See Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc., Del.Supr.,
676 A.2d 436, 444 (1996) (citing Oberly v.
Kirby, Del.Supr., 592 A.2d 445, 464 (1991)
as setting forth the standard by which to
determine whether sale is of substantially
all corporate assets and thus requiring
shareholder approval per 8 Del.C. § 271).
32 See, e.g., Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 11713, Allen, C. (Aug. 9,
1995), rev'd on other grounds,
676 A.2d 436
(1996) (68% sale effecting "radical
transformation" of corporation's business
triggers § 271); BSF Co. v. Philadelphia
Nat'l Bank, Del.Supr.,
204 A.2d 746 (1964)
(75% of "only substantial income producing
assets" triggers § 271); Katz v. Bregman,
Del.Ch., 431 A.2d 1274, 1276 (1981) (sale of
51% of assets generating between 35% and 52%
of corporation's income over previous five
years and change from steel drum to plastic
drum manufacturing triggers § 271); Gimbel
v. Signal Cos., Del.Ch., 316 A.2d 599, 606,
aff'd,
316 A.2d 619 (1974) (sale of 26% of
assets generating 15% of income insufficient
to trigger § 271). Of course, it will
certainly be true that the percentage may be
so small as to be insufficient as a matter
of law. But that is not the case here.
33 Defs.' Reply Br. 1 at 5-8.
34 The adjustment formula calls for the
number of common shares into which a single
preferred share was previously convertible
("A") to be multiplied by a fraction. The
numerator of this fraction is the market
price per share of Milestone common on the
date of the distribution ("B"), and the
denominator is B minus the then fair market
value of the assets ("C"). Thus, A times B
divided by (B minus C). For a more detailed
examination of the application of a very
similar formula, see HB Korenvaes Invs.,
L.P. v. Marriott Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No.
12922, Allen, C. (July 1, 1993), ("Korenvaes
II ").
35 See Gilbert v. El Paso Co., Del.Ch.,
490 A.2d 1050, 1054 (1984), aff'd,
575 A.2d 1131 (1990) (citing 5 Williston on Contracts
§ 670 (3d ed. 1969)).
36 Del.Supr., 624 A.2d 1199, 1209 (1993).
37 Id.
38 Id. at 1208.
39 Jedwab, Del.Ch., 509 A.2d at 594.
40 See HB Korenvaes Invs., L.P. v.
Marriott Corp., Del.Ch., C.A. No. 12922,
Allen, C. (June 9, 1993), ("[I]t is only
necessary to demonstrate that the tailored
terms of the certificate, which define the
nature of the property owned, govern the
propriety of the proposed transaction.").
41 See id. (transfer of parent assets to
subsidiary and distribution of stock to
common stockholders covered by conversion
and adjustment provisions of certificate
thus limiting preferred stockholders to
contractual claims).
42 Pl.'s Opp.Br. 2 at pp. 21-22.
43 See Korenvaes II.
44 See In re Brae Shareholders Litig.,
Del.Ch., C.A. No. 11348, Chandler, V.C. (May
15, 1991).
45 To the extent, if at all, Milestone
stock was diluted by the purchase of the
Concord assets, the Mandors' pre-transaction
holdings were similarly affected. That they
may have made up for the resulting dilution
on the other side of the transaction does
not change the fact. See In re Tri-Star
Pictures, Inc., Litig., Del.Supr., 634 A.2d
319, 330 (1993) (individual claim must
allege injury particular to plaintiff and
not suffered by all stockholders generally). |