Delaware Supreme Court Discusses Meaning of “Business Combination” In Activision Vivendi Case

As it turns out, it isn’t ambiguous.

Link: Activision Blizzard Inc. v Hayes

In an appeal of an injunction, the Delaware Supreme Court took a look at whether a stock buyback would be a “business combination” requiring stockholder approval under Activision’s bylaws.

Background

Activision Blizzard Logo
Activision Blizzard fights for its rights to buyback its shares.

In 2008 Activision bought Vivendi’s video game subsidiary for Activision shares.  Vivendi also made a separate cash investment in Activision.  Activision’s bylaws were amended to require approval of unaffiliated stockholders with respect to any merger, business combination or similar transaction between Activision and Vivendi. In 2012, Vivendi wanted to sell its Activision stake but found no takers.  Activision agreed to a buyback, under which Vivendi would create a non-operating sub, “Amber,” to hold the assets for sale and Activision would purchase Amber. Activision did not seek stockholder approval, which was the part of the reason for the litigation, which resulted in a preliminary injunction.

Court’s Analysis

The court first looked to see if “business combination” was ambiguous.  Nope.

“A provision is ambiguous only if it is “reasonably susceptible to more than one meaning,” and the fact that the parties offer two different interpretations does not create an ambiguity. Moreover, a provision “may be ambiguous when applied to one set of facts but not another. Finally, the provision must be read in context.”

The court decided that while the meaning could be ambiguous in some contexts, it was not ambiguous here because under their agreement, Vivendi will sell 429 million shares of Activision stock back to Activision. Because those shares will become treasury stock, control of Activision will shift from Vivendi to Activision’s public stockholders. Vivendi’s holdings will decrease from 61% to 12%, and Vivendi’s representation on Activision’s board will decrease from six appointees to none.

Since there was no “combination or intermingling of Vivendi’s and Activision’s businesses,” it is not a business combination.  In fact it is the opposite of a business combination.  These companies will be separating themselves.  As a result, the stockholder approval requirement does not apply.

In addition, structuring the sale through Amber does not change the analysis.  Neither the form of the transaction nor its size changes its fundamental nature. Amber is a shell created to serve as the transaction vehicle.  The court stated that calling Amber a business “disregards its inert status” and “glorifies form over substance.”

The size of the deal does not change the analysis.  The plaintiffs argued that it was a “value-moving” transaction.  However, the bylaws do not require stockholder approval based on size of the deal.

In addition, the bylaws do not require stockholder approval for any deal between Activision and Vivendi, only specified transactions.  While the Chancery Court may have been looking out for the non-interested shareholders’ interests, other provisions of the bylaws already provided for independent director approval for related party transactions.

Can Open Market Stock Purchases Resulting In Majority Control Constitute A Breach Of Fiduciary Duty?

How about the board’s granting of the right to engage in those purchases?

Answer:  No.

Link:  In re Sirius XM Shareholder Litigation

Background

In 2009, Sirius was hurting.  Liberty Media was nice enough to provide $530 million for a 40% interest, some board seats and some consent rights.  The agreement included a standstill provision preventing Liberty from gaining majority control for three years.  Following the standstill period, the agreement prevented Sirius from using a poison pill or charter or bylaw amendment to interfere with additional purchases of Sirius stock by Liberty.  The investment and agreement were disclosed publicly.

At the end of the standstill period, Liberty announced it would obtain a controlling position through open market purchases.  Sirius opposed it, and even opposed the FCC approval that Liberty would need in order to obtain majority control.  However, Liberty was able to get its majority stake.

Plaintiffs sued claiming breach of fiduciary duty on the part of Liberty and the Sirius board of directors.

Fiduciary Duty Claims Against Sirius Board

The court initially noted that the time period for fiduciary duty claims ran from the time of the agreement in 2009, and thus their claims were time barred.  The plaintiffs also argued that the board should have instituted a poison pill to prevent Liberty’s additional purchases, the court said this was not the wrongful act.  The plaintiff’s complaints arise out of the initial agreement in 2009, and the plaintiffs did not have a good reason for waiting to file a lawsuit.  The terms of the deal were fully disclosed in 2009, and the board’s inability to stop Liberty’s purchases were based on the 2009 deal.

Anything the board did that is subject of the plaintiffs’ complaint was based upon 2009 activity and, therefore, the statute of limitations ran from 2009.  As the court said, “[u]nder Delaware law, a plaintiff’s cause of action accrues at the moment of the wrongful act – not when the harmful effects of the act are felt – even if the plaintiff is unaware of the wrong.”

Fiduciary Duty Claims Against Liberty

The Plaintiffs also argued that Liberty had a fiduciary duty even if it was a non-controlling shareholder when it initially invested in 2009.  This duty of fairness would preclude Liberty from buying additional shares in the open market unless the Sirius board approved the terms.

The court disposed of this claim as well.  First, they are time-barred because they were still the product of the arms-length negotiations and deal in 2009 when Liberty was not even a stockholder, much less a controlling stockholder.  Second, open market purchases after disclosing the intent to make such purchases do not involve any control over Sirius’ board or misuse of Sirius’ resources by Liberty.  There was no allegation of insider trading or an attempt to effect a going private transaction.  To the contrary, even the plaintiffs conceded that Liberty’s purchase announcement would result in the market price for the Sirius shares to increase prior to purchase.  As a result, what the plaintiffs are really claiming is a repackaging of their opposition to the 2009 deal.

The only real complaint of the plaintiffs is that the board did not institute a poison pill, which was not only prohibited by contract but is not actionable under Delaware law without additional bad acts (recall the Landry’s case, Louisiana Municipal Police Employees’ Retirement System v. Fertitta, 2009 WL 2263406 (Del Ch. July 28, 2009)).

The court finished with its adherence to basic corporation law and contracts:

“There are many situations when corporations enter into contractual arrangements that have important implications for corporate control in conceivable future situations; for example, debt instruments commonly give creditors rights that, if used, may result in their assuming control.  The use of such rights to obtain control in the situations specifically contemplated by those contracts does not constitute a fiduciary breach.  As this court has explained, even “[a] controlling shareholder is not required to give up legal rights that it clearly possesses; this is certainly so when those legal rights arise in a non-stockholder capacity.””

Outsourcing Corporate Boards?

An interesting proposal by a couple of corporate law professors may cause you to rethink how companies populate their boards. 

Law professors M. Todd Henderson (U. Chicago) and Stephen M. Bainbridge (UCLA) have proposed a novel way to expand further the universe of corporate service providers by allowing the outsourcing of board functions.

The profs note that critics complain that the array of tasks for a board to deal with are too vast for a board to perform effectively.  They also note that “boards fail to police managers adequately or make good decisions” and that they are generalists without the breadth of experts the company may need.

First, boards generally, and exchange listed board committees specifically, have the ability to hire expert advisors directly without relying on company management.

However, this brings up a point that has bothered me for a while.  Before, and particularly after, Sarbanes-Oxley, the corporate governance “experts” have emphasized the need for independent board members, free of the influence of management.  However, with respect to the operations and performance of a company, that responsibility and information resides with management.

In other words, particularly in the post-Sarbanes-Oxley world, the most sensitive and important decisions are under the purview of the people with the least connection to the company and the least access to the information.  I understand the fear of conflicts of interest and the desire for input free of the influence of management, but this seemed to me to be a mismatched solution.

Basically, I’m not sure I agree with the critics.  You can point to specific governance horror stories, but there are thousands of public companies and many thousands more private companies where corporate boards operate adequately or even successfully.  There are actual instances of effective governance that pre-date Sarbanes-Oxley, if you can believe it.  In the case of policing management and making crucial policy decisions, why would you have those responsibilities rest with the individuals furthest removed from the company?

In addition, there are many examples of corporate boards with structures resembling the All Governance Expert Blue Ribbon Panel Paradigm that turned out to be miserable governance failures (*cough*Enron*cough*).

I know this was a bit of tangent, but it was my first reaction to the profs’ article.  There will be more.  It is recommended reading.

Priceline Does Not Owe You Anything, Including Protecting You From Your Willingness To Spend More Than A Seller Will Accept.

Plaintiffs sue Priceline over “Name Your Own Price” and because Priceline didn’t protect them from poor bidding practices and the knowledge that Priceline needs to make a profit to stay in business.

Johnson v. Priceline.com, Inc. – US Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit

Lo and behold, advertising where the former Star Trek star pretends to negotiate discounted hotel rates for Priceline customers does not create a fiduciary duty and corresponding duty to disclose a profit motive for a business.

Priceline’s Name Your Own Price (“NYOP”) is designed to not accept a bid unless it can get a hotel room meeting a customer’s specifications at a rate lower than the bid amount, with Priceline keeping the spread.  In other words, it is not a nonprofit, either by design or circumstance.

Priceline did not explicitly say it was making money from customers using NYOP, but it didn’t hide it either.

Two plaintiffs got the hotels they were looking for at prices they were willing to pay, but they claimed they were harmed because Priceline didn’t tell them it was paying the hotels less than the NYOP bid amount.  The plaintiffs looked to the William Shatner commercials to contend that Priceline owed a fiduciary duty to the plaintiffs to tell them that the cost of providing the service was less than the price the customers paid.

The court looked for a fiduciary duty.  The plaintiffs said that because an agency relationship exists between Priceline and its customers with respect to NYOP, “fiduciary duties automatically apply by operation of law.”  The court said that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate that Priceline was a travel agent, with the corresponding duties.

Looking to agency principles, the court stated that once Priceline accepts a customer’s bid, it is contractually obligated to provide the desired accommodations at the stated sum. After submitting the bid, however, the customer retains no authority over the manner in—or price for—which the reservation will be procured.

The court continued by stating that Priceline’s actions are akin to those of an intermediary or middleman rifling through its inventory of discounted hotel rooms until it locates an item for which the customer has stated a willingness to pay a specified price. The fact that only Priceline has access to both its algorithm and its particular inventory of discounted hotel rooms does not create a fiduciary relationship with a customer where none otherwise exists.

Since there was no agency relationship, there was no fiduciary duty to breach.

William Shatner looking out for your best interests.


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Technical stuff.  Points for staying awake.
The three elements necessary to an agency relationship are:

 

  • a manifestation by the principal that the agent will act for him;
  • acceptance by the agent of the undertaking; and
  • an understanding between the parties that the principal will be in control of the undertaking.
An agent owes a duty of disclosure, specifically, a “duty to use reasonable efforts to give his principal information which is relevant to affairs entrusted to him and [that] the principal would desire to have.” Second, an agent owes a duty to account for all profits arising out of the agent’s employment that do not form part of his agreed-upon compensation.

Thinking You’ll Do A Better Job Than The Other Guy Is Not Reason Enough For A Board Of Directors To Avoid “Approval” Of Dissident Board Nominees That Will Harm The Corporation

Withholding approval is a threat to the shareholder franchise when the incumbent board retains power to approve a dissident slate but refuses to entrench itself.

SandRidge Energy found itself in a proxy fight launched by hedge fund instigator, TPG-Axon. TPG launched a consent solicitation to de-stagger SandRidge’s board, amend the bylaws, remove all of the current directors and install its own slate. Let’s just say that SandRidge’s performance had been lacking at the time.

The SandRidge board resisted and warned stockholders that the election of TPG’s slate would be a change of control that would trigger a requirement for SandRidge to repurchase its outstanding notes, referred to colorfully as the “Proxy Put.” If a new board majority is not approved by an incumbent board, the Proxy Put was triggered for purposes of the notes.

A stockholder claimed breach of fiduciary duty because the sitting SandRidge board did not have a proper basis for failing to approve the TPG slate for the purposes of the Proxy Put.

The court said that a board deciding whether to approve directors for the purposes of the Proxy Put could not act consistently with its fiduciary duties by simply failing to approve any director candidates opposing the incumbents.

The duty of loyalty demanded that the incumbents may only refuse to grant approve if the dissidents posed such a material threat of harm to the corporation that it would constitute a breach of the duty of loyalty to pass control to them. For example, unless the dissidents lacked ethical integrity, were looters or proposed a program that would demonstrably be materially adverse to the company’s ability to meet its obligations to the creditors, then the incumbents should approve the dissidents and allow the stockholders to vote.

The incumbents noted that the dissidents did not have sufficient energy experience, although several members of their slate had substantial experience, even if not in the upstream oil and gas industry. However, that the incumbents believed that they were better suited to run the company is not a sufficient fiduciary basis to deny approval of the dissidents. The incumbents did not have reason to doubt the integrity of the dissident slate. As the court said:

“In other words, the incumbent board has simply made the same determination that all incumbents who seek to continue in office make: we are better than the new guys and gals, so keep us in office.”

The court went on to disparage a company that would enter into an agreement with a Proxy Put without hard negotiation and clear economic advantage given the obvious entrenching purposes of a Proxy Put as the court believes that the costs of resisting such a term would be insubstantial to non-existent.*

Update:
SandRidge and TPG settled, and SandRidge added four TPG nominees to the board.

Links:
Kallick v. SandRidge Energy
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*Ed. Note: Not really. Many lenders/noteholders/counterparties want to know exactly who they will be dealing with during the term of their agreement. The Proxy Put is probably more widely used and integral to many transactions than the court realizes.