VALEANT PHARMACEUTICALS INTERNATIONAL, Plaintiff,
v.
ADAM JERNEY, Defendant.
C.A. No. 19947 
COURT OF CHANCERY OF DELAWARE, NEW CASTLE
December 1, 2006, Submitted
March 1, 2007, Decided
NOTICE:
THIS OPINION HAS NOT BEEN RELEASED FOR PUBLICATION. UNTIL RELEASED, IT IS
SUBJECT TO REVISION OR WITHDRAWAL.
Michael Hanrahan, Esquire, Gary F. Traynor, Esquire, Paul A. Fioravanti, Jr.,
Esquire, Laina M. Herbert, Esquire, PRICKETT, JONES & ELLIOTT, P.A, Wilmington,
Delaware, Attorneys for the Plaintiff.
Jesse A. Finkelstein, Esquire, Srinivas M. Raju, Esquire, Brock E. Czeschin,
Esquire, RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A, Wilmington, Delaware; Pierce ODonnell,
Esquire, ODONNELL & ASSOCIATES, PC, Los Angeles, California, Attorneys for the
Defendant.
LAMB, Vice Chancellor.
In this post-trial opinion, the court renders judgment on the claims asserted
against Adam Jerney, a former director and president of ICN Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. (now known a Valeant Pharmaceuticals International). Jerney was sued,
together with Milan Panic, ICNs former Chairman and CEO, and other members of
the former ICN board of directors, for claims arising out of their unanimous
collective decision to pay large cash bonuses to themselves and to certain other
ICN executives and employees in connection with a later-aborted corporate
restructuring. The litigationwas initiated as a stockholder derivative action
but, following a change in control of the board, a special litigation committee
of the board of directors chose to realign the corporation as a plaintiff. As a
result, with the approval of the court, the company took over control of the
litigation. During the course of the discovery, the company reached settlement
agreements with all of the non-management directors, leaving Panic and Jerney as
the only remaining defendants at the trial. After trial, the company reached a
settlement agreement with Panic. Thus, the only claims now remaining are against
Jerney.
The trial record leaves no doubt that the decision to pay cash bonuses was
ill-advised and was not entirely fair to the company. The process pursued by the
directors was deeply flawed with self-interest and no way substituted for
arms-length bargaining. It was also improperly dominated by Panic, who was the
recipient of the largest portion of the money. Thus, there is nothing about the
process that supports the fairness of the result. There is also little evidence
to support the conclusion that, independent of the process, the price terms were
somehow fair to the company. On thecontrary, while the evidence suggests that
some amount of bonus to the executives and employees might have been justified
by past practices of the company, the extravagant payments actually made cannot
be adjudged fair by any rational measure.
Jerney was not the motivating force behind this improper and self-interested
scheme. Nevertheless, he voted as a director in favor of the plan and personally
received $3 million. In the circumstances, Jerney will be required to disgorge
the full amount of his bonus, plus interest, and will be held liable for
additional damages flowing from his breach of the duty of loyalty in voting to
approve the unfair, self-interested bonuses.
I.
A. The Parties
The plaintiff in this action is Valeant Pharmaceuticals International, a
Delaware corporation with its principal executive offices in Costa Mesa,
California. Valeant is engaged in the manufacture and marketing of
pharmaceutical products worldwide. Valeant was known as ICN Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. until November 11, 2003. To avoid confusion, the plaintiff will be referred
to as ICN or the company in this opinion.
The sole remaining defendant is Adam Jerney. An ICN employee since 1973,
Jerney rose through the ranks, eventually becoming President and Chief Operating
Officer in 1993, positions he resigned on November 15, 2002. Jerney was also a
director of the company from 1992 until May 2002.
B. The Facts
1
1. The History Of ICN
The company was founded in 1959 by Panic as International Chemical and Nuclear
Corporation. The company grew rapidly, amassing total sales of $100 million by
1970. In 1994, several related entities were merged to create ICN. For the end
of fiscal year 2001, shortly before the culmination of the events at issue, ICN
reported revenues of $858 million and operating income of $189 million. The
companys market capitalization was roughly $2.6 billion.
By 2002, the most significant drug developed by ICN was the antiviral medication
Ribavirin. Although first synthesized in 1971, Ribavirin did not receive FDA
regulatory approval until 1994. The following year, ICN entered into a royalty
agreement with Schering-Plough for the development and marketing of Ribavirin as
a component in a combination therapy for Hepatitis C. In 1998, the FDA approved
Ribavirin and Intron A as a combination therapy. By the end of 2001,
Schering-Ploughs sales of the combination therapy exceeded $1.5 billion. Sales
of Ribavirin comprised a substantial part of ICNs revenues and represented
roughly 60% of its overall value.
2. The Planned Restructuring
Despite the success of Ribavirin, activist stockholders led by Special
Situations Partners (SSP) questioned whether ICNs true value was being
recognized by the market and urged the board of directors to consider splitting
the company into parts. To an extent, this dissatisfaction grew out of public
criticism of Panics generous compensation and idiosyncratic management
practices, as well as widespread criticism of the boards oversight. Despite
Panics reservations, ICN engaged UBS Warburg (then called Warburg, Dillon Read)
to explore means of enhancing stockholder value. ICN also retained Fried, Frank,
Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP as its legal counsel.
UBSs recommendation was to spin-off the Ribavirin rights and royalties under
the agreement with Schering-Plough and related antiviral assets into a separate
company, and then separate ICNs remaining U.S. and international businesses
into separate entities. UBS suggested that the total market value of these three
entities could exceed the total market value of ICN by $1 billion to $1.5
billion. Accordingly, on June 15, 2000, ICN announced a plan to restructure
itself into three separate entities: ICN Americas, ICN International, and a new
entity to be known as Ribapharm that would hold ICNs Ribavirin and related
antiviral assets. The idea was for Ribapharm to be put together as a pure
biotechnology company, resulting in a stock attractive to investors who wanted a
pure play investment in the biotechnology sector, and specifically Ribavirin.
3. The Development Of Ribapharm In Preparation For The IPO
The first step of the proposed restructuring was the IPO and spin-off of
Ribapharm. To accomplish this, ICN created a new corporate entity and
transferred to it the Schering-Plough royalties, the chemical compounds in ICNs
library, as well as the personnel and assets at ICNs Costa Mesa facility. Over
the next two years, ICN increased the research staffnearly tenfold and
injected $28 million to modernize Ribapharms facilities.
The issue of what role then current ICN management would play in Ribapharm
proved troubling. Panic initially proposed to retain management control and play
an active role in Ribapharm. That plan was later revised so that Panic would
remain as Chairman and CEO of ICN Americas and become Chairman of both ICN
International and Ribapharm. Jerney would become CEO of ICN International. SSP
and others objected to even this reduced level of involvement by Panic in
Ribapharm and threatened a proxy fight unless Panic, Jerney, and others agreed
to cut all ties with Ribapharm at the time of the IPO. To avoid a proxy fight,
ICN and Panic agreed that Panic and the other senior managers of ICN would have
no executive or board positions with Ribapharm.
2 In return, SSP agreed not to
nominate anyone for election at the 2000 annual meeting. SSP and other dissident
stockholders did, however, run a competing slate at the 2001 annual meeting, on
a platform that called for continued support and acceleration of the Ribapharm
IPO and spin-off. The dissident nominees easily defeated the management slate.
Still, there was a considerableperiod of delay in accomplishing the Ribapharm
IPO.
4. The IPO
UBS agreed to serve as lead underwriter of the Ribapharm IPO and, in December
2001, estimated the value of the company at around $2.25 billion. UBS also noted
that the figure could rise to over $3 billion after several positive quarters.
By this time, UBS estimated the IPO price in the range of $13 to $15 per share.
Two unusual aspects of the Ribapharm IPO bear emphasis. First, the IPO was not
for a new or emerging venture, but rather for the core of ICNs business.
Second, although Ribapharm represented the majority of ICNs assets, ICNs
existing senior management team would not take any role in the spunoff
entity. Together these factors, combined with the fact that it would be the
second largest biotech IPO in the last twenty years, complicated the pricing and
execution of the offering.
5. The IPO Is Repriced
In the late afternoon on April 11, 2002, the day before the IPO was scheduled to
take place, UBS informed ICN that the IPO would have to be priced at $10 per
share, not in the previously predicted $13 to $15 range. The reduction was
attributable to a general downturn in the biotech sector, including the negative
reaction of investors to another biotech IPO. The Dow also declined 200 points
on that day.
Despite the large decrease in the offering price, the board decided to proceed
with the transaction. In part, the board made this decision based on the advice
of counsel. Fried Frank advised ICN that, with the downturn in biotechs, the IPO
might not go forward at all if it was pulled since pulling a public offering
and repricing is like death to a public offering.
3 Thus, the IPO went forward
at $10 per share. At that price, the total equity value of Ribapharm was only
$1.5 billion, not the $2.25 billion earlier predicted. Nonetheless, the IPO was
a success, and 0] UBS exercised its green shoe over allotment options in the
following weeks, resulting in total proceeds of $300 million in the IPO.
Ribapharms stock increased modestly in value following the IPO, despite
unfavorable market conditions in the biotech sector.
6. The Disputed Bonuses
The record reflects that ICN management began planning a substantial grant of
Ribapharm options as early as October 2000.
4 The first public disclosure of any
similar plan came when Amendment
5 to the Ribapharm SEC Form S-1 was filed on
March 21, 2002, disclosing an intention to award 8,350,000 Ribapharm options to
Panic, Jerney, and others at ICN, including all of its outside directors, none
of whom would serve any ongoing role in Ribapharm. Amendment 5 also reported the
fair market value of the option grant as estimated at $53.7 million, assuming an
IPO price of $14 per share. The majority of the options, 5 million, were to be
granted to Panic. Jerney was to receive 500,000. The outside directors were
each to receive 50,000 options.
There was immediate and strong investor opposition to the proposed option grant.
In addition to the objection that the options were wildly excessive and did not
benefit Ribapharm going forward, the objecting stockholders also did not want
Panic to have any ongoing control over Ribapharm. Panics proposed 5 million
options, if exercised, would give him voting control over a significant block of
Ribapharm stock. This would be inconsistent with the dissident stockholders
desire to have Panic severed from Ribapharm entirely. Furthermore, the options
themselves threatened substantial dilution of Ribapharm stock and would result
in a significant 2] noncash charge on Ribapharms opening financial statements,
concerns to all potential investors.
At the March 28, 2002 ICN board meeting, UBS reported to the directors that the
option grant, specifically the proposed 5 million option allocation to Panic,
threatened the success of the IPO. In an effort to save the planned option
grants, Panic suggested that the matter be referred to the compensation
committee. The compensation committee met five times in the following days to
discuss the bonuses. At its final pre-IPO meeting, on April 10, 2002, the
committee first confirmed its support for the option grant program but suggested
as an alternative to recommend that the full board authorize the payment of $55
million in cash, in proportion to the planned option awards.
7. The Compensation Committee Process
The compensation committee consisted of three directors: Stephen Moses, Rosemary
Tomich, and Norman Barker, the chairperson. As directors, each was slated to
receive 50,000 Ribapharm options under the option grant plan, or the cash
equivalent of $330,500 under the substituted cash bonus plan. Thus, the
compensation committee members were clearly and substantially interested in
the transaction they were asked to consider.
The record reflects that at least two of the committee members were acting in
circumstances which raise questions as to their independence from Panic. Tomich
and Moses had been close personal friends with Panic for decades. Both were in
the process of negotiating with Panic about lucrative consulting deals to follow
the completion of their board service.
5 Additionally, Moses, who played a key
role in the committee assignment to consider the grant of 5 million options to
Panic, had on many separate occasions directly requested stock options for
himself from Panic.
The process the committee followed was equally subject to the influence of Panic
and other members of ICNs management and became little more than an exercise in
discovering an adequate justification for the options issuance plan.
6 For
example, the committee did not select its own independent compensation
consultant. Rather, the committee was directed by the board to seek out
Towers Perrin to do this for us.
7 Moreover, the committee does not appear to
have known that Towers Perrin had been brought into the matter months earlier by
Gregory Keever, ICNs general counsel. According to an internal UBS email,
Keever told UBS before March 27, 2002 that Towers Perrin had looked
specifically at this issue and determined it was justified in this instance.
8 Keever, like all senior ICN executives, had a large personal stake in the
outcome of the committees work, as he was slated to receive 350,000 options
worth $2.3 million under the grant. It is noteworthy that while ICNs outside
counsel played little role in the compensation committees work, Keever attended
all of its meetings and acted as its secretary.
8. The Towers Perrin Report
On April 9, 2002, Kenneth Troy delivered the Towers Perrin report to the
compensation committee. The parties characterize the substance of the report in
dramatically different ways. Jerney relies on the report for the proposition
that the bonuses were fair. The plaintiff, in addition to noting the conflicted
and tainted process, argues that the report supports an irrefutable conclusion
that the bonuses were unprecedented and excessive. The report contains no
comparable transactions where officers and directors received bonuses in
connection with a transaction of this type.
The Towers Perrin report does illustrate a situation where
bonuses were awarded in connection with the spin-off of a newly developed
entity. These incubator IPO situations occur when existing management develops a
new line of business and, in connection with the IPO of that business,
management is granted bonuses. Unlike the present case, these situations occur
when a subsidiary business, not the main business, is spun off from a company.
Similar situations can also occur when the entire business of a company is taken
public through an IPO, a so-called success fee. In incubator IPOs, the bonuses are usually in cash
paid by the parent company. Here, the initial bonus proposal was for options in
the entity to be spun off.
The report concludes that the $53.7 million value of the options was a
reasonable estimate and was comparable to a 2% management success fee in
commensurate incubator IPO situations. Thus, while Towers Perrin found no
comparable transactions, its report opines the option bonuses were justifiable
at the level proposed. Specifically, the report indicates that the compensation
committee could award Panic up to 5 million options as a bonus based on an
estimated value of Ribapharm of $3 billion. This award was purportedly in return
for the contributions Panic made in the development of the Ribapharm assets.
9
The Towers Perrin report also reviewed past compensation practices of the
company. The report concludes that the compensation for the companys
executives, specifically Panic, was within the median range of similarly
situated executives. However, the report did not consider Panics recently
amended compensation agreements. The report also did not consider certain other
recent compensation studies performed for ICN. These studies, relied on by the
plaintiff, indicate Panics total direct compensation was 27% higher than the
75th percentile and 51% higher than the median among CEOs in ICNs peer group.
The Towers Perrin report does discuss the fact, emphasized by Panic to Troy,
that ICN had paid event-driven success bonuses in the past.
9. The Shift From Options To Cash
The Towers Perrin report not only omits any opinion on cash bonuses, but is
expressly limited to a consideration of the option bonuses proposal, although
the report suggests that cash was the more common bonus medium in other
transactions. The concept of switching to a cash bonus scheme was initially
considered during the April 10, 2002 compensation committee meeting. The meeting
lasted only fifteen to twenty minutes. Based on the evidence presented at
trial, it is clear that the committee hurriedly decided to propose a cash bonus
as an alternative for the board to consider along with the option bonus plan and
decided that $55 million, the midpoint of the option value range recommended by
Towers Perrin, was the proper amount.
The decision to convert to cash was not initiated by management and was, in
fact, resisted by Panic, who wanted options. The switch from options to cash was
simply a necessary accommodation to rebellious investors, in order to keep the
IPO on track. By switching from options to cash, the cost was shifted entirely
to ICN, which had ample cash. This removed a sizeable expense from the Ribapharm
opening financial statements. Moreover, both the overhang of options at
Ribapharm and Panics potential interest in Ribapharm were dramatically reduced.
The suggestion to pay $55 million in bonuses was based upon the erroneous
assumption of a $3 billion valuation of Ribapharm. Panic tried to push the
measure past the board. Although one of the directors (elected in 2001 on the
dissident slate) at first proposed limiting the bonus pool to $10 million, the
board agreed to reduce the bonus pool only slightly to $50 million. The
board then unanimously approved the cash bonus pool of $50 million to be
allocated in proportion to the previously proposed option grants. The board
referred the matter to the compensation committee to implement the conversion to
cash.
The next day, UBS told ICN that the IPO would have to be repriced to $10 per
share. Panic was advised by two Fried Frank lawyers to have the board revisit
the bonus scheme authorization in light of the change in pricing. Panic ignored
this advice. Although the board met to authorize the IPO pricing, it never
reconsidered the amount of the bonus award.
Working in consultation with Moses, who acted in lieu of the compensation
committee, Panic later reallocated the bonuses, increasing his and those of a
few others, and reducing or eliminating a few.
10 In the end, Panic took
$33,050,000, up from $29,950,000. Jerneys bonus was cut by $305,000 to
$3,000,000. As part of this reallocation, the total bonus pool decreased
slightly from $50 million to $47.8 million. Each of the outside directors
received $330,500.
10. Events Following The IPO
ICN always intended to follow the IPO with a second step, i.e. the tax-free
spin-off of the rest of Ribapharm. The only condition precedent to this event
was the receipt of a favorable tax ruling from the Internal Revenue Service.
11
Before that ruling was received, a second group of dissident directors was
elected, in large part in reaction to the size of the bonuses. Panic resigned
shortly thereafter. Jerneys term as a director expired in May 2002 and he
resigned as president in November 2002.
In a strange twist, the reconstituted board, including both the 2001 and the
2002 dissidents who ran on platforms promising to move forward promptly with the
IPO and the spin-off, decided to abandon the spin-off. This decision led to
litigation by the persons who bought Ribapharm in the IPO. Eventually, ICN
repurchased the outstanding shares of Ribapharm through a $6.25 per share tender
offer.
12 Following the Panic management teams departure, the company
suffered three straight years of net losses and a dramatic decline in its stock
price.
C. Expert Testimony At Trial
1. Jerneys Experts
Two experts testified on behalf of Jerney and Panic about the fairness of the
bonuses. Anne T. Kavanagh, a consultant with a background in capital markets and
investment banking, testified about the structure of the transaction and the
decisions of the board in light of the changes in circumstances throughout the
process. She opined that the $13 to $15 range of price of the IPO was reasonable
when predicted and that the board had no reason to know that the IPO would not
be priced within that range. She further opined that the decision to go forward
with the IPO after UBS reported that the price would have to be reduced to
$10 was prudent. Moreover, she maintained that the switch from options to cash
was reasonable given the market pressures and that the board had no reason to
believe the spin-off would not occur. Finally, she expressed her view that the
IPO was a success for Ribapharm. The court largely agrees with these opinions
and does not further discuss them here.
Kavanagh rendered several additional, more controversial opinions. First,
Kavanagh testified that the amount of the bonuses was appropriate when measured
against the options award in new technology development cases. Second, she
opined that it would not have been possible for the board to materially alter
the cash bonuses in response to the reduction in the pricing of the IPO. Third,
she opined that Panic should be considered a restructuring expert and was,
therefore, compensated appropriately based in that role.
Jerneys other expert, Richard H. Wagner, is the President of Strategic
Compensation Research Associates, a small advisory firm located in West Chester,
Pennsylvania. Wagners report, like Kavanaghs, attempts to provide support for
the fairness of switching from options to cash, not reducing the total bonus
pool in light of the IPO repricing, and the allocation of the bonuses. He also
shares Kavanaughs view that Panic could have been considered a restructuring
expert. In opining that the bonuses were fair and justified, Wagner points out
that even the dissident stockholders believed that the IPO and spin-off would
increase stockholder value by up to 50%. Wagner also asserts that there was
uncertainty as to whether Jerneys existing ICN options would be adjusted in
connection with the IPO and spin-off and, in that connection, opines the company
would benefit by awarding the bonuses in lieu of paying the existing options.
2. The Companys Expert
The company offered George B. Paulin as an expert to refute the opinions offered
by Kavanagh and Wagner. Paulin is the President and CEO of Frederic W. Cook &
Co., Inc., and specializes in the areas of executive and employee compensation.
Paulins report focuses on the competitive reasonableness and business rationale
for the bonuses. He opines that in an IPO/spin-off as opposed to a merger,
acquisition, or divestiture, bonuses are uncommon and have no business
justification. This, he says, is because in an IPO or spin-off the
stockholders of the parent corporation continue to hold the exact same assets as
before the transaction. In examining 36 comparable transactions, Paulin found
only nine where special compensation was paid to officers. In the largest
comparable transaction, the Park Place Entertainment/Hilton Hotels transaction,
Hiltons CEO received stock options in the parent company valued at $26.3
million or 1.24% of the new companys value. The 75th percentile of the nine
transactions where special compensation was paid was .371% of the value of new
company transaction, well below the 2.2% in bonuses awarded to Panic alone in
the present case. Paulins report goes on to discuss the relative historical
level of ICNs executive compensation, concluding it was well above the median
for all relevant time periods.
3. The Courts Conclusions Regarding The Expert Testimony
Having considered the testimony, the initial expert reports, and the rebuttal
reports of Paulin and Wagner, the court concludes that, while the decisions of
the board to convert the options to cash and to proceed with the IPO might have
been reasonable given the circumstances, the underlying decision to grant
bonuses and the determination of the bonus amounts was flawed. The views of Jerneys experts do not undercut this conclusion. For example, Wagner maintains
that Jerney and Panic were underpaid based on comparable executives.
13 Paulins
rebuttal report demonstrates that this is simply not true.
14
The court is also unable to credit Wagners suggestion that Panic or Jerney
would have suffered some dilution 6] of their existing ICN stock options in the
spin-off or that the company stood to benefit by awarding bonuses in lieu of
spin-off options.
15 Nothing in the record supports these opinions. Indeed,
Paulins rebuttal report demonstrates the opposite is true, citing an Internal
Revenue Code formula requiring an automatic adjustment of options. If there was
some evidence that Jerney contractually agreed to relinquish his existing
options in exchange for the IPO cash bonus, Wagners opinion might be tenable.
There is not, and without such evidence Wagners opinion is mere conjecture.
The court also rejects Wagners and Kavanaghs view that Panic and Jerney should
have been considered restructuring experts and should have been compensated as
such. Overseeing the IPO and spin-off were clearly part of the job of the
executives at the company. This is in clear contrast to an outside restructuring
expert who is hired for a brief time to supervise the restructuring of a
company. In fact, the company retained and paid UBS in large part to provide
advice and guidance throughout the restructuring, much as a designated
restructuring expert would do.
In the end, what is noticeably absent from both the Wagner and Kavanagh expert
reports is any comparable transaction that would justify the award of such large
bonuses. Wagners report attempts to distinguish the Ribapharm transaction as
unique and therefore justifying the bonuses. While undoubtedly unusual, nothing
that distinguishes the Ribapharm IPO can be thought to have justified such a
large bonus pool. On the contrary, the key distinctions-that the spin-off was of
the one major asset of the company, the fact that existing management would not
have a role in the spun off entity, and the overestimation of the value of
Ribapharm in the projected pricing of the IPO-all cut against the award of large
bonuses.
II.
Jerney takes the position that the bonus payments were entirely fair and
embraces his burden to prove entire fairness. He emphasizes that both he and
Panic were largely responsible for the development of Ribapharm and the
long-term success of ICN and that the IPO was among the most significant events
in the companys 8] history. Therefore, Jerney asserts, while the process
employed may not have been perfect, it was fair and appropriate in the
circumstances, and the level of bonuses was justified.
Jerney maintains that the fair dealing prong of entire fairness was satisfied at
trial. He characterizes the process employed as deliberative and one involving
spirited discussions among the participants over the size and nature of the
bonus grants. In further defending the process, Jerney points to the advice from
Towers Perrin, UBS, and the companys legal advisors. He also asserts that the
board was relying on the advice of expert advisors. That advice, he says,
insulates the board because both the idea for bonuses and the amount of the
bonuses were proposed by UBS and the bonuses were approved by Towers Perrin.
Jerney also points to the legal advice of Keever and Fried Frank, who he says
made him very comfortable in terms of the process.
16 He stands behind his
reliance on lawyers from Fried Frank, who he maintains never said the process
was improper or that the bonuses should be lowered.
It is the second prong of the entire fairness test, fair price, where Jerney directs the most attention. As a threshold matter, Jerney focuses his
fair price analysis on the role of experts in the transaction. To substantiate
his two key points--that a bonus was merited and the amounts were
appropriate--Jerney makes three principal arguments. First, he says, the awards,
and particularly the size of the awards, were appropriate under ICNs event
bonus policy.
17 This unique compensation structure, he argues, is permitted
under Delaware law and the extraordinary nature of the event justified the
bonuses under ICNs policy. The crux of Jerneys position is that while the
bonuses may not be appropriate for other companies, they were appropriate in
ICNs circumstances and under ICNs system. Moreover, he maintains, the great
success of the Ribapharm assets were not the subject of an event bonus prior to
the IPO, even though a bonus was clearly merited. Next, Jerney argues that the
bonuses were appropriate because of the extraordinary role he and Panic played
in the development of ICN and Ribapharm. Finally, Jerney argues that the
testimony of his expert, Wagner, and, perhaps more importantly, the
compensation provided to the companys new management, proves the level of the
bonuses was fair.
Alternatively, Jemey argues that, even if this court concludes the transaction
was not entirely fair, the court should use its equitable powers to reduce,
rather than eliminate entirely, the bonus paid to him. He maintains that he is
entitled to a very substantial sum under ICNs event bonus policy, and to
deprive him of that would be reverse unjust enrichment.
18 Therefore, in the
alternative, Jerney argues this court should merely reform downward the amount
of the challenged awards to an equitable level.
The company counters that the transaction was not entirely fair because the
transaction was the result of a fatally flawed, entirely self-interested
process that ended with grossly excessive bonuses when no bonuses should have
been awarded at all. The company maintains that the process used to approve the
transaction was dominated by management. Moreover, it says, the process employed
was designed to justify managements preconceived bonus plan. Finally, ICN
argues that Jerneys reliance on experts, both legal and compensation, does not
provide a defense.
III.
Before the 1967 enactment of 8 Del. C. § 144, a corporations stockholders had
the right to nullify an interested transaction.
19 To amerliorate this
potentially harsh result, section 144 as presently enacted provides three safe
harbors to prevent nullification of potentially beneficial transactions simply
because of director self-interest. First, section 144 allows a committee of
disinterested directors to approve a transaction and, at least potentially,
bring it within the scope of the business judgment rule.
20 Second, the
transaction may be ratified by a fully informed majority vote of the
disinterested stockholders.
21 Finally, the challenged transaction can be
subjected to post-hoc judicial review for entire fairness.
22
As Jerney concedes, this is clearly a situation where entire fairness review is
applicable. Where the self-compensation involves directors or officers paying
themselves bonuses, the court is particularly cognizant to the need for careful
scrutiny.
23 Self-interested compensation decisions made without independent
protections are subject to the same entire fairness review as any other
interested transaction.
24 To avoid this high level of judicial scrutiny, an
independent compensation committee can be employed to award salaries and bonuses
to officers.
25 In this case, because no independent committee approved the
transaction, Jerney bears the burden of proving the transaction was entirely
fair.
26
Directors who stand on both sides of a transaction have the burden of
establishing its entire fairness, sufficient to pass the test of careful
scrutiny by the courts.
27 Entire fairness can be proved only where the
directors demonstrate their utmost good faith and the most scrupulous inherent
fairness of the bargain.
28 Entire fairness has two components: fair dealing
and fair price.
29 The two components of the entire fairness concept are not
independent, but rather the fair dealing prong informs the court as to the
fairness of the price obtained through that process. The court does not focus on
the components individually, but determines entire fairness based on all
aspects of the entire transaction. Fair dealing addresses the questions of when
the transaction was timed, how it was initiated, structured, negotiated,
disclosed to the directors, and how the approvals of the directors and the
stockholders were obtained.
30 Fair price assures the transaction was
substantively fair by examining the economic and financial considerations.
31
IV.
A. Fair Dealing
It is clear that despite some superficial indicia of a fair process, the bonus
transaction was the product of unfair dealing by Panic, Jerney, and the other
interested parties. This underlying reality permeated every aspect of the
process, one that was, from the outset, undertaken to justify a bonus on the
order of $30 million to Panic, rather than determine if bonuses--and in what
amounts--might be appropriate.
The origin of the present bonus scheme was the initial recommendation by UBS to
spin-off the Ribapharm assets. UBS suggested that, in connection with the
spin-off, bonuses would be appropriate. The seed of that suggestion fell on
fertile ground. Throughout the process and the unforeseen events that occurred,
neither Panic, nor ICN management, nor its board deviated substantially from
this idea and, in fact, increased the amount of the bonuses to be awarded.
1. Panic Domination Of The Process
The entire process from the initial idea of awarding bonuses to the final
reallocation of the bonus pool was dominated by Panic. The first reference to
bonuses produced at trial, an October 2000 draft of ICNs Form S-1, indicated a
bonus pool of 5 million options, 3 million of which were to be allocated to
Panic. Without board involvement, Panic and management increased Panics option
allocation to 5 million and added additional bonuses for every director. Even
other employees such as Jerneys and Panics secretaries and support staff were
included in the scheme.
32 Thus, the idea that there would be a bonus pool in
the $50+ million value range in the structure proposed by Panic was clearly
established and even disclosed in Ribapharms March 2002 Form S-1 filing, before
the board took any action or even considered the matter.
The first evidence of board involvement came after Amendment 5 to the Ribapharm
Form S-1 on March 21, 2002, when, in response to a firestorm of criticism from
investors, Panic agreed that the board should refer the matter to the
compensation committee. All three members of that committee were, themselves,
interested in the proposal. Moreover, two of the committee members, Moses and
Tomich, appear to have lacked independence from Panic resulting from, among
other things, their undisclosed negotiations with Panic over future consulting
agreements and, in the case of Moses, separate option grants.
Nor did the committee act independently. Rather, it retained Towers Perrin as
its advisor at the direction of management, perhaps without the knowledge that
Towers Perrin had already given advice to management on the bonus proposal.
At first, Troy struggled to come up with a framework that made sense.
33 As he
further explained his analysis of the proposed option grant:
[W]e did come to the conclusion that it was unprecedented in its form, that you
would give options in the spun entity to parent company execs that would have no
involvement with the ongoing enterprise. That was unprecedented.
34
This lack of precedent caused Troy and Towers Perrin to suggest that Panics
option grant be cut down from 5 million to 3 million. Troy testified that he
made this proposal in a presentation to the committee on April 5. Troy was then
asked to speak to Panic, who explained to Troy that he was looking for
support of this grant as being reasonable based on his role in creating this
product and business.
35 By the end of the meeting, Troy understood that the
proposal was the one Panic had negotiated (with UBS or unknown others), that it
was predetermined, and that Towers Perrins job was to find a rationale to
support it. The final Towers Perrin report, produced a few days later, omitted
any suggestion of cutting Panics allocation and, instead, supported the full 5
million 8] option award for him.
It is also the case that the information provided to Towers Perrin was
controlled by management and skewed the results of the analysis. For example,
Towers Perrin used the $2.5 billion to $3 billion valuation given to it by
management when (i) the actual anticipated value of the IPO was lower and (ii)
the expected incremental value resulting to the entire enterprise from the IPO
and spin-off was even less. Using the mid-range of this exaggerated valuation
and an assumption that a 2% success bonus was justified, Towers Perrin derived a
total bonus pool of $55 million. As Troy recognized, this level of bonus was
unprecedented and difficult to justify, even assuming an unrealistically high
value range.
A review of the compensation committee meeting minutes confirms the courts
conclusion from the other evidence that the process the committee followed was
one designed simply to justify a predetermined outcome dictated 9] by Panic and
ICNs management. The committee did not examine afresh the question of whether
any bonus arrangement was appropriate and, if so, how much and what form of
bonus to award. This can be seen in the April 2 meeting minutes where the
committee began their consideration by discussing [t]he question of what
rationale is appropriate to support the award .
36 The other minutes are
replete with suggestions by Moses, in particular, of possible explanations both
for awarding sizeable bonuses and for paying a large portion of any award to
Panic.
37
2. The Process Was Unfair
In addressing questions of when the transaction was timed, how it was
initiated, structured, negotiated, disclosed to the directors, and how the
approvals of the directors and the stockholders were obtained, it is clear
Jerney has not met his burden. The transaction was initiated by management. It
was structured so that everyone, including even the board members and the
members of the compensation committee, would receive a bonus. The structure was
not negotiated. Everyone involved had an interest in the transaction. The few
who opposed it achieved only minor concessions and still voted in favor of it
and accepted their shares. Finally, and perhaps most perniciously, the board,
the compensation committee, and outside experts were given and relied on
inflated and misleading information provided by management led by a recalcitrant
CEO who stood to benefit most from the transaction. Therefore, the court cannot
conclude that Jerney has carried his burden of proving that the process of
awarding the bonuses was entirely fair. It simply cannot be said that an
independent board advised by independent experts would have employed a similar
process in negotiating 1] or approving bonuses of this kind.
B. Fair Price
The courts finding that ICNs management and board used an unfair process to
authorize the bonuses does not end the courts inquiry because it is possible
that the pricing terms were so fair as to render the transaction entirely fair.
38 Nevertheless, where the pricing terms of a transaction that is the product of
an unfair process cannot be justified by reference to reliable markets or by
comparison to substantial and dependable precedent transactions, the burden of
persuading the court of the fairness of the terms will be exceptionally
difficult. Relatedly, where an entire fairness review is required in such a case
of pricing terms that, if negotiated and approved at arms-length, would involve
a broad exercise of discretion or judgment by the directors, common sense
suggests that proof of fair price will generally require a showing that the
terms of the transaction fit comfortably within the narrow range of that
discretion, not at its outer boundaries.
1. Bonuses Under ICNs Event Bonus Policy
The first step in the fair price analysis is to determine whether any bonus was
justified. The evidence at trial showed that, under ICNs event bonus policy,
management did occasionally receive bonuses in connection with extraordinary
transactions. The policy is theoretically permissible under Delaware law, even
though such bonuses could be viewed as compensation for past services.
39 Event
bonuses were paid on at least two prior occasions--the agreement with
Schering--Plough to license Ribiviran and ICNs issuance of $525 million in
debentures. The IPO and planned spin-off were extraordinary events and,
therefore, some form of bonus might have been possible under that policy.
40
While it is true that no directly comparable transactions were found, the
transactions the defendants did elicit were similar enough for the court to
conclude that some bonus was possible here. If, as all parties seem to agree,
the IPO and spin-off were designed to increase ICNs overall market value and
benefit stockholders, such an increase in market value could merit a bonus under
the companys idiosyncratic event bonus policy.
The companys second argument, that the bonuses should have been paid with the
spin-off, also comes up short. The evidence at trial showed that everyone
involved assumed that the spin-off would inevitably occur: it was required under
the terms of the deal ICN made with SSP in 2000, and management and the board
were committed to it. Thus, at the time the decision was made, there was nothing
inherently improper in paying the bonuses upon the receipt of the proceeds from
the IPO. There was evidence at trial that bonuses are sometimes paid at the time
of the spin-off. But the court is not convinced that this should be a hard and
fast rule.
Nevertheless, the court cannot find that ICNs event bonus policy justified
paying such substantial additional bonus compensation to ICN management based
solely on the development of Ribapharm as a stand-alone entity. Clearly, Panic,
Jerney, and the other members of management were well compensated for their work
at ICN, work that included the development of the assets that were transferred
to Ribapharm. Additionally, the previous event bonuses for the Schering-Plough
license agreement and the debt issuance were directly related to the development
of the Ribapharm assets. Further, annual bonuses were paid, at least in part, in
recognition of the success of Ribavirin and the FDA approval of the drug.
Ribavirin was the primary asset of ICN, and it is nonsensical to conclude that
the past compensation of ICNs management was not reflective of its development.
Thus, while some bonus might have been appropriate, the amount of the bonus
should have been calculated with reference to the value added to ICN by the IPO
and spin-off and not the total value of Ribavirin or other assets contributed by
ICN to Ribapharm.
2. The Bonuses Were Based On An Inflated Valuation Of Ribapharm
Were it proper to base the bonuses on the total value of Ribapharm, the
record reflects that the size of the bonus was calculated as 2% of an
unrealistic and inflated $2.5 billion to $3 billion value. This range was taken
from the high end of UBSs projected total value estimate. But this value was
not UBSs projected starting value for Ribapharm. Instead, it is a potential
value that might be achieved after a period of positive results. The initial
predicted value of Ribapharm was only $2.25 billion, even assuming a $14 per
share IPO price, or approximately 20% lower than the value used in determining
the amount of the bonuses. This fact alone makes the amount of the bonuses not
entirely fair.
More importantly, the premise that the bonuses should have amounted to 2% of the
total value of the spin-off was unreasonable. Towers Perrin opined that a 2%
award might be appropriate in a smaller transaction, such as an incubator IPO or
spin-off of a small division of a larger company. But ICN was spinning off its
most valuable asset. Thus, the bonuses were awarded essentially for taking the
biggest piece of an already public company and reissuing it as a new public
stock. Moreover, the bonuses in question were being paid to parent company
managers who would have no further involvement in the spun company. When
viewed from this perspective, it is difficult to see how such large bonuses
could be justified. Thus, it is not surprising that Towers Perrin was unable to
find comparable grant data.
3. Adjustment To The Bonuses When The IPO Was Repriced
Even if the court assumes the propriety of paying an event bonus based on the
IPO and spin-off, the substantial reduction in the IPO price demanded a
reduction in any bonus award. When the compensation committee and the board
approved the bonuses, they did so with the understanding that the IPO would be
priced at $13 to $15 per share. When the IPO pricing was reduced to only $10 per
share a day later, lawyers from Fried Frank advised Panic that the board should
consider reducing the bonus amount in light of that new information. Panic
ignored that advice. He and the compensation committee (principally, Moses) did
adjust the bonus schedule, but this was done merely to favor some employees,
especially Panic, and disfavor others. The net amount of the bonuses was reduced
slightly, and this outcome was unrelated to and not reflective of the
decrease in the IPO pricing. Thus, even assuming the propriety of the rationale
used to award these bonuses, the amount of the bonuses cannot be regarded as
entirely fair.
4. The Price Was Unfair
Considering all of the evidence, the court must conclude that Jerney has failed
to show the fairness of the price terms of the bonus grants. The price terms
obviously cannot be justified by reference to any reliable market. Nor is there
proof in the record of substantial comparable transactions to which the court
might look to find support for the payment of bonuses of this size. Moreover,
although the award of bonuses was certainly a discretionary action, as opposed
to one required by contract or statute, it can hardly be said that the boards
decision was the result of a limited or narrow exercise of its powers. Indeed,
the record at trial did nothing to dispel the impression that the amount of the
bonuses paid was grossly excessive.
C. No Advice Of Experts Defense Is Available
Jerney argues that his good faith reliance on the advice of experts provides a
defense, citing 8 Del. C. § 141(e). Although reasonable reliance on expert
counsel is a pertinent factor in evaluating whether corporate directors have met
a standard of fairness in their dealings with respect to corporate powers, its
existence is not outcome determinative of entire fairness.
41 To hold otherwise
would replace this courts role in determining entire fairness under Del. C. §
144 with that of various experts hired to give advice to the directors in
connection with the challenged transaction, creating a conflict between sections
141(e) and 144 of the Delaware General Corporation Law. To illustrate the point, Jerney can point to no case where any court has held that section 141(e)
provides a defense in an entire fairness action. This is particularly true where
the person claiming the defense, like Jerney, is interested in the challenged
transaction.
42
Jerneys claimed defense also finds little or no support in the record.
While there is conflicting evidence as to whether the Fried Frank lawyers
advised the directors that the entire fairness standard would apply, there is no
credible evidence that the board was ever told by them that the transaction was
fair or that the business judgment rule would operate. On the contrary, although
the court has no need to resolve the disputed record, there is ample reason to
conclude that outside legal counsel, in fact, advised the directors that the
transaction was subject to entire fairness and might not be found to be entirely
fair. Beyond giving such advise, it was not within the expertise of Fried Frank
or any other independent counsel to opine as to the actual substantive fairness
of the proposal.
Any attempt to rely on the Towers Perrin report encounters similar factual
problems. First, the directors retained Towers Perrin at the direction of
management and failed to ask Troy about his earlier work related to this same
issue. Substantively, the Towers Perrin report addresses the earlier proposal
for Ribapharm to award options, and expressly limits its advice to that issue.
Moreover, the 9] advice given in the Towers Perrin report was predicated on
substantially inflated values for both the IPO pricing and the net benefit of
the IPO and spin-off to ICN. Therefore, it would have been unreasonable for
Jerney to rely on that report as an expert opinion as to the fairness of ICNs
payment of $50 million in cash bonuses.
V.
The company seeks the following recovery from Jerney: (1) his $3 million bonus;
(2) the $3.75 million advanced on his behalf for attorneys fees and expenses
incurred in connection with his defense; (3) his one-eleventh pro rata share, or
$755,396.36, of the bonuses paid to non-directors; and (4) his one-eleventh pro
rata share, or $72,349.96, of the fees and expenses of the special litigation
committee.
43 The company could have sought a greater recovery from Jerney,
including damages flowing from the payment of Panics $33 million bonus.
Nevertheless, having settled its claims against all other defendants, the
company has chosen to limit its claim against Jerney as noted.
Jerney advances several arguments to reduce the amount of damages for which
he is liable.
44 First, regarding his bonus, Jerney argues that it is in the
discretion of the court to award either money damages or disgorgement, and, in
exercising that discretion, the court should award only money damages and only
to the extent that the bonus was unfair. In addition, Jerney points out that
three of the settling directors executed joint tortfeasor releases that included
the companys claim against them to recover Jerneys bonus, thus reducing
Jerneys liability for his bonus proportionately. Finally, Jerney argues that,
in determining his pro rata share of damages in categories 3 and 4 above, the
proper number to use as the denominator is the full twelve member board, not
just the eleven who attended the meeting and voted on the bonuses.
The court begins with the observation that there are two distinct sources
for an award of damages in the case of an unfair self-dealing transaction.
First, such a transaction is voidable as between the parties to the transaction.
Second, the underlying breach of the fiduciary duty of loyalty may give rise to
other damages.
45 In this case, the disgorgement obligation most clearly applies
to the $3 million bonus paid by the company to Jerney as part of the voidable
transaction. The second source of liability more generally governs Jerneys
liability for damages for the bonuses paid to others, such as non-directors, and
to incidental damages incurred by the corporation, such as the costs of the
special litigation committees investigation into the charges leveled against
him and others in the initial derivative complaint. In addition, Jerneys
liability to repay amounts advanced to him for his defense in this matter arises
under the corporations certificate of incorporation and his contractual
undertaking.
A. Recovery Of The Bonus
Because Jerney has failed to show that the transaction was entirely fair, it is
clear that he has no right to retain any of the $3 million bonus he received. As
between Jerney and the company, that payment must be rescinded, requiring Jerney
to disgorge the full amount.
46 Jerneys liability in this regard will not be
limited to the excess of what the court might conclude was a fair bonus.
47
There is also no suggestion that the corporation has been made whole as a result
of its settlements with the other defendants or that it would be unjustly
enriched by Jerneys return of his bonus. Thus, there is no inequity in
requiring Jerney to disgorge the payment he received. Nor will the court
apportion responsibility to account for the fact that several of the settling
directors signed joint tortfeasor releases since Jerneys disgorgement
obligation stems from his receipt of the companys money, not from his
participation in the decision to authorize the payment. In any event, the Joint
Tortfeasors Law has no application to Jerneys obligation to return his bonus.
48
B. Jerneys Pro Rata Share
Jerney makes two other arguments to reduce the damage claim against him. First
he contends that, if he is required to pay a pro rata share of categories 3 and
4 above, his share should be one-twelfth, not one-eleventh. This argument turns
on Jerneys contention that Jean-Francois Kurz, an outside director, should be
counted in the total number of directors liable for the breach of fiduciary duty
despite Kurzs absence from the April 10, 2002 board meeting at which the
bonuses were approved. Second, Jerney argues that, because the company failed to
seek the return of the bonuses from those officers and employees who were not
directors, the company should not be able to recover damages from him in
connection with those bonuses.
Kurz, who accepted a $330,500 bonus, was sued and settled the claim against him
on the same terms as the other outside directors. Generally speaking, a director
who does not attend or participate in the boards deliberations or approval of a
proposal will not be held liable.
49 This is not an invariable rule and the
result may differ where the absent director plays a role in the negotiation,
structuring, or approval of the proposal.
50 Similarly, an absent director,
such as Kurz, who knowingly accepts a personal benefit flowing from a
self-interested transaction and refuses to return it upon demand, can be thought
to have ratified the action taken by the board in his absence and, thus, share
in the full liability of his fellow directors.
In this case, the record of Kurzs involvement in the transaction is
sparse: (i) he participated in the March 28, 2002 meeting of the ICN board and
voted to refer the bonus issue to the compensation committee; (ii) he did not
attend the April 10, 2002 meeting and, thus, did not vote on the transaction;
(iii) he voiced no objection and took the money; (iv) and, when he refused to
return the money, he was sued and settled. On this limited record, and solely
for the purpose of reckoning Jerneys pro rata share of damages, it is
appropriate to regard Kurz as having ratified or adopted the action taken by the
other directors and, thus, to count him among those potentially liable to the
company. Thus, the court agrees with Jerney that his pro rata share of liability
for categories 3 and 4, will be deemed to be one-twelfth, rather than
one-eleventh.
51
Jerneys second argument to limit his exposure to categories 3 and 4 has no
merit. The fact that the company chose not to pursue the recovery of bonuses
from recipients who were not directors should not limit or restrict the
companys ability to recover those amounts from the guilty self-dealing
directors, including Jerney, who authorized those payments. The companys
decision was necessarily tied to difficult issues of personnel management, as
many of those recipients continued working for the company. Moreover, there is
nothing in the record suggesting that the companys actions interfered with
whatever rights, if any, Jerney might ever have had with respect to those
payments.
C. Special Litigation Fees And Expenses
Jerney is liable for his share of the special litigation committee expenses
incurred by the company. Under Delaware law, special litigation committee
expenses are recoverable for a breach of fiduciary duty when the plaintiff
corporation prevails on the suit and the special litigation committee expenses
were necessary to prosecute that suit.
52 Here, the special litigation committee
expenses were made necessary by the course of events initiated by [Jerneys]
breach.
53 While the majority of the damages were attributable to the
recovery of Panics bonus, Jerney will be required to pay back one-twelfth of
the expenses.
D. Advanced Attorneys Fees
Since Jerney was not successful in any measure in his defense of this action, he
is required by the terms of the undertaking he signed to reimburse attorneys
fees and expenses advanced by the company on his behalf in his defense. Jerney
does not deny the source of this liability, but he does make the point that,
because he and Panic were jointly represented in the litigation, any order
requiring him to reimburse all of the amounts jointly advanced with respect to
his and Panics attorneys fees and expenses would impose on him the obligation
also to fulfill Panics reimbursement obligation. Jerney suggests that an
equitable apportionment would recognize that Panic, not he, was the focus of
this lawsuit and that a majority of the fees and expenses incurred are properly
attributable to Panics defense. He suggests two methods of apportionment:
first, that he should pay a fraction of the total equal to the amount of his
bonus ($3 million) divided by the amount of Panics bonus ($33 million), or
one-eleventh; second, that he and the company should now engage in a
supplemental proceeding to review all of his lawyers time sheets and expense
reports to fairly allocate the advancements between him and Panic.
The company, having settled with Panic after trial in a deal that made no
allocation of the amounts recovered to Panics reimbursement obligation, takes
the surprisingly aggressive position that Jerney should be required to reimburse
all of his and Panics joint defense costs. In this connection, the company
argues that Jerney has waived whatever right he ever had to seek contribution
from Panic for payments made under their identical undertakings.
The court is unable to agree with any of the suggestions advanced by either
party. It is fair to say that Panic, rather than Jerney, was the focus of
attention throughout this litigation. This is so because Panic was the CEO,
the driving force behind the bonus plan, and the recipient of 70% of the monies
paid. Nevertheless, Jerney was a willing participant in the scheme, and his
defense rested importantly on the successful defense of Panic. In view of this,
the court rejects Jerneys suggestion that his share should be limited to
one-eleventh of the total of his and Panics joint defense costs. Such an
allocation would substantially understate Jerneys liability on his undertaking.
The court also rejects the idea of a supplemental proceeding to allocate fees
and expenses between Panic and Jerney. While it might be possible to identify
small items that related to discovery directed to one or the other of these two
men, there is no doubt that their defense was, by and large, jointly conducted.
Indeed, even lawyers time that might appear to be devoted solely to one or the
other, such as attendance at Panics deposition or the formulation of answers to
interrogatories directed to Jerney, is just as readily seen as constituting an
element of their joint defense.
Weighing all of the circumstances, the court concludes that the only fair
outcome is for Jerney to reimburse 1] the company for half of all fees and
litigation costs advanced in connection with his and Panics defense, or $1,875
million. Such an equal division is consistent with whatever right to equitable
contribution Jerney and Panic would have against each other with respect to the
obligations arising from their undertakings, the general principle being that
0joint obligations give rise to a right to equal contribution.
54 While Jerney
and the company might have agreed, ex ante, to a different allocation, an equal
division is a reasonable and just outcome. Jerney did retain separate settlement
counsel after trial and is 100% liable for fees incurred in that endeavor.
E. Prejudgment Interest
The company requests prejudgment interest on its judgment. Delaware law is
settled that [a] successful plaintiff is entitled to interest on money damages
as a matter of right from the date liability accrues.
55 Generally, the
legal rate of interest has been used as the benchmark for pre-judgment
interest.
56 This court has broad discretion, subject to principles of
fairness, in fixing the [interest] rate to be applied.
57 In this case, the
parties agree that the court should set prejudgment interest at the legal rate,
that the legal rate at the time of the wrong was 6.25%, and that this rate
should not fluctuate during the period leading up to judgment. All that remains
to be addressed is whether prejudgment interest be compounded and, if so, the
period of compounding. In view of Jerneys sophistication as a senior executive
officer of a public company, and in view of the fact that he has had the use of
$3 million of the companys money since April 2002, fairness dictates that the
award of interest should be compounded.
58 In the courts discretion, interest
shall be compounded monthly.
59
VI.
For the foregoing reasons, judgment will be entered in favor of the company and
against Adam Jerney, as set forth herein. Counsel for the company are directed
to submit an appropriate form of order, on notice, within 7 days. IT IS SO
ORDERED.
1 The court finds the following facts after trial on the merits.
2 As part of the same agreement, ICN agreed with SSP to reduce the size of the
board of directors to nine, to hold the 2001 and 2002 annual meetings of
stockholders no later than May 30, 2001 and May 29, 2002, respectively, and
that, in total, no less than two-thirds of the directors would stand for
election at those two meetings.
3 Alexander Dep. 89:22-90-21.
4 In its October 31, 2000 draft Form S-1, there is disclosure of a plan to issue
3 million Ribapharm options to Panic, 500,000 to Jerney, and 1.5 million to
other ICN officers who would not play a role at Ribapharm. Interestingly, this
unfiled draft does not reflect any intention of awarding options to ICNs
outside directors.
5 Moses and Tomich eventually received those consulting agreements in June of
2002.
6 Moses testified that the committee began by examining whether any award was
justified, but this testimony finds no support in the minutes of the committee
meetings or the other evidence.
7 Tomich Dep. 43:23-44:6.
8 PX 247.
9 Interestingly, an April 5, 2002 discussion draft of the Towers Perrin report,
apparently shared with management but not with the compensation committee,
suggested a reduction in the proposed grant to Panic from 5 million to 3 million
options. This suggestion led to a meeting between Troy and Panic, at which Panic
described his contributions to the success of ICN and Ribavirin, in particular.
The final Towers Perrin report supports an award to Panic at the 5 million
option level.
10 The company subsequently settled and lost in arbitration to some of those
whose bonuses were reduced.
11 This ruling was issued on July 24, 2002.
12 The tender offer led to a suit in this court that resulted in a class action
settlement releasing all claims, including the decision not to pursue the
spin-off of ICNs interest in Ribapharm. See In re Ribapharm, Inc. Sholder
Litig., C.A. Nos. 20337, 20387 (Dec. 2, 2004) (Order).
13 DX 428 at 4-5 (Over the period 1995 through 2001 such cash compensation
was in the middle of the pack [and] the non-cash compensation paid to Messrs.
Panic and Jerney throughout this period was also in the middle of the pack.)
14 JX 352 at 6 (Salary and bonus is not total compensation. Mr. Panics total
compensation exceeded the 75th percentile for peer companies when the annualized
grant-value of his stock options is taken into account. Mr. Jerneys total
compensation exceed the median for peer companies but fell moderately short of
the 75th percentile.).
15 DX 428 at 10.
16 Jerney 645:18-24.
17 Def.s Post-trial Br. 41.
18 Id. at 48-49 (citing Technicorp., 2000 WL 713750, at *52).
19 Oberly v. Kirby,
592 A.2d 445, 466 (Del. 1991) (citing Potter v. Sanitary Co.
of Am., 22 Del. Ch. 110, 194 A. 87 (Del. Ch. 1937)).
20 8 Del. C. § 144(a)(1).
21 Id. at (a)(2).
22 Id.
23 Delta Star, Inc. v. Patton, 76 F. Supp.2d 617, 633 (W.D.
PA. 1999).
24 Telxon Corp. v. Meyerson, 802 A.2d 257, 265 (Del. 2002) (holding directoral
self-compensation decisions lie outside the business judgment rules presumptive
protection, so that, where properly challenged, the receipt of self-determined
benefits is subject to an affirmative showing that the compensation arrangements
are fair to the corporation).
25 Merritt v. Colonial Foods, Inc., 505 A.2d 757, 764 (Del. Ch. 1986).
26 Id.
27 Weinberger v. UOP, Inc.,
457 A.2d 701, 710 (Del. 1983).
28 Id.
29 Id. at 711.
30 Id.
31 Id.
32 JX 3, 5, 6, 55.
33 Troy Dep. 47.
34 Id.
35 Id. at 49.
36 JX 38 at 1.
37 The company attempts to convince the court that the defendants and the other
interested directors drove the idea of changing the bonuses from options to
cash, thereby enriching themselves without the commensurate risk of options. The
evidence does not support this conclusion. The trial testimony demonstrated that
both Jerney and Panic opposed the change to cash and would have far preferred to
receive options. It is true that, by agreeing to take cash and by refusing to
adjust the amount of cash when the IPO was priced at $10, instead of $13 to $15,
Jerney, Panic and the others received greater value than they would have
received under the option award plan. This is true because the options would
have been granted at the $10 per share IPO price and would immediately have been
worth less than the cash payments that were calculated as if the IPO took place
at $14 per share. In addition, when ICN ultimately repurchased the Ribapharm
shares, Ribapharm options were simply canceled. Thus, Panic and Jerney would
likely have ended up with valueless options. Nevertheless, the evidence does not
support the conclusion that Panic or Jerney drove the decision to pay cash. On
the contrary, the conversion to cash marks the one instance where managements
domination of the process was not complete.
38 Oliver v. Boston Univ., 2006 Del. Ch. LEXIS 75, 2006 WL 1065169, at *25 (Del.
Ch. Apr. 14, 2006).
39 See Steiner v. Meyerson, 1995 Del. Ch. LEXIS 95, 1995 WL 441999, at *7 (Del.
Ch. July 19, 1995) ([T]here is, of course, no single template for how
corporations should be governed and no single compensation scheme for corporate
directors.).
40 The company maintains that, even if ICN had a valid event-based bonus policy,
the bonuses paid here were unwarranted for two other non-price reasons. First,
it argues that no comparable transactions were adduced at trial. Second, it
argues that, since the bonuses were based on some assumed value of the IPO and
the spin-off, no payments should have been made before the spin-off occurred.
41 Cinerama, Inc. v. Technicolor, Inc.,
663 A.2d 1134, 1142 (Del. Ch. 1994),
affd, 663 A.2d 1156 (Del. 1995) (emphasis added).
42 Boyer v. Wilmington Materials, Inc., 754 A.2d 881, 910 (Del. Ch. 1999).
43 Hereinafter referred to as categories 1 through 4.
44 Through the process of supplemental briefing, the company eliminated some of
the categories of damages it seeks and reduced to one-eleventh the amount of
damages it seeks from Jerney with respect to the non-director bonuses and
special litigation committee investigation costs. To the extent Jerneys
supplemental briefing discusses possible elements of damages since abandoned by
the company, this opinion omits discussion of those issues.
45 In re Cox Comm ns, Inc. Sholders Litig., 879 A.2d 604, 614-615 (Del. Ch.
2005) ([Section] 144 has been interpreted as dealing solely with the problem of
per se invalidity; that is, as addressing only the common law principle that
interested transactions were entirely invalid and providing a road map for
transactional planners to avoid that fate. The somewhat different question of
when an interested transaction might give rise to a claim for breach of
fiduciary duty, i.e., to a claim in equity, was left to the common law of
corporations to answer. Mere compliance with § 144 did not necessarily
suffice.) (citation omitted).
46 See, e.g., Benihana of Tokyo, Inc. v. Benihana,
Inc., 891 A.2d 150, 185 (Del. Ch. 2005).
47 The situation is quite unlike that addressed in Technicorp Intl II, Inc. v.
Johnston, 1997 Del. Ch. LEXIS 126, 1997 WL 538671 at *15-16 (Del. Ch. Aug. 25,
1997), where the court first stripped unfaithful managing fiduciaries of all
profit from their misdeeds but then permitted them reasonable compensation for
eleven years of service. Here, there is no question that Jerney was adequately,
if not generously, compensated for his prior years of service to ICN.
48 The parties post-trial briefs raise the issue of the application of the
Delaware Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Law, 10 Del. C. §§ 6301 et.
seq., to damages claims for breach of fiduciary duty. This question has never
been addressed directly by either this court or the Delaware Supreme Court,
although at least one federal court considering the issue held that the law does
apply in such circumstances. Hollinger Intl, Inc. v. Hollinger, Inc., 2006 U.S.
Dist. LEXIS 35947, 2006 WL 1444916, at *2 (U.S.D.C. N.D. Ill. Jan. 25, 2006). In
response to the courts request for supplemental briefing on that issue, it
became clear that the company is not seeking damages from Jerney beyond his pro
rata share of the special litigation committee costs and non-director bonuses.
Pro rata payments do not, of course, give rise to claims for contribution among
persons who are jointly and severally liable for the same loss. Thus, the only
demand for damages possibly raising an issue under that law is the demand that
Jerney repay his entire bonus. As discussed above, however, that claim rests
primarily on Jerneys obligation to disgorge the amounts paid to him in the
unfair self-dealing transaction--an obligation that is not a joint liability
with any of the former defendants. For these reasons, the court does not
consider the application of the Joint Tortfeasor Law to this case.
49 In re Tri-Star Pictures, Inc., Litig., 1995 WL 106520, at *3 (Del. Ch. Mar.
9, 1995) (That being so, those directors absence from the meeting, and their
abstention from voting to approve the Combination, does, in my view, have
dispositive significance, and shields these defendants from liability on any
claims predicated upon the boards decision to approve that transaction.).
50 Citron v. E.I. Du Pont de Nemours, Inc., 584 A.2d 490, 499 at n.12 (Del. Ch.
1990) (holding that the parent company-designated directors of a subsidiary who
played no role in the negotiation or approval of the going-private merger were
not liable in the context of an entire fairness challenge to the terms of the
transaction).
51 In reaching this conclusion, the court emphasizes that the decision to limit
the damages demand on Jerney to his pro rata share of categories 3 and 4 was
made by the company. The company having made that concession, however, it is
proper for the court to calculate that share correctly.
52 Thorpe v. CERBCO, Inc., 1996 Del. Ch. LEXIS 110, 1996 WL 560173, at *2 (Del.
Ch. Sept. 13, 1996), affd, 703 A.2d 645 (Del. 1997).
53 Id.
54 Estate of Keil, 51 Del. 351, 145 A.2d 563, 565, 1 Storey 351 (Del. 1958); cf.
Chamison v. Healthtrust Inc., 735 A.2d 912, 925-26 (Del. Ch. 1999).
55 Summa Corp. v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
540 A.2d 403, 409 (Del. 1988).
56 Id.
57 Id.
58 Brandin
v. Gottlieb, 2000 WL 1005954, at *29 (Del. Ch. July 13, 2006)
59 Gotham Partners v. Hallwood Partners, 817 A. 2d 160, 173 (Del. 2002).
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