Agostino v. Hicks

845 A.2d 1110, 2004 WL 569353
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedMarch 22, 2004
DocketC.A. 20020-NC
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 845 A.2d 1110 (Agostino v. Hicks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agostino v. Hicks, 845 A.2d 1110, 2004 WL 569353 (Del. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor.

Pending before the Court is defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiffs amended complaint on the ground that it states derivative, as opposed to individual or direct, claims. Plaintiff was a shareholder of Via-systems Group, Inc. (“Viasystems” or the “Company”) until his shares were eliminated without consideration after the Company filed for bankruptcy. For the reasons detailed below, I hold that the complaint states only derivative claims, which were extinguished in bankruptcy.

I. FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS

Viasystems was founded in 1996 by Hicks, Muse, Tate and Furst Incorporated (“HMTF”) and Mills & Partners, Inc. as a supplier of circuitry components to manufacturers of telecommunications equipment. 1 Viasystems raised roughly $890 million in an initial public offering in March 2000. Viasystems’ financial performance improved after the IPO, but made a turn for the worse after Viasys-tems’ Board of Directors approved a financing deal involving HMTF on July 19, 2001. This transaction forms the heart of the complaint.

The essence of the deal was an infusion of cash into Viasystems by HMTF in exchange for promissory notes and warrants to purchase Viasystems stock. Specifically, pursuant to a “Subscription Agreement” the Company received $100 million from HMTF. 2 In return, HMTF received $100 million in 14% promissory notes due *1114 in 2007 3 and warrants to purchase 10,000,-000 shares- of Viasystems stock for a penny per share. The Subscription Agreement also obligated the Viasystems Board to put the warrant issuance to a shareholder vote in order to satisfy certain New York Stock Exchange regulations. With two directors abstaining, the Board approved the Subscription Agreement unanimously on July 19, 2001. Separately, but on the same day, two directors signed a voting agreement with HMTF pledging to vote their personal Viasystems shares in favor of the Agreement.

The Board of Viasystems at the time of the Subscription Agreement’s approval included Thomas Hicks, Jack Furst, James Mills, Timothy Conlon, Richard Vieser, Kenneth Yontz, Thomas O’Brien, and Brian Mulroney. 4 A majority of the Board members were associated with HMTF apart from their role as directors of Via-systems: Hicks and Furst are HMTF partners; Mills manages HMTF affiliates; Vieser serves on the board of HMTF affiliates and is personally invested in HMTF; Yontz is personally invested in HMTF affiliates; and Mulroney is employed by HMTF. Although Hicks and Furst abstained from the July 19 vote, Mills, Vieser, Yontz, and Mulroney, all allegedly interested, voted for the transaction. Viasystems’ Board on the date the Subscription Agreement was approved, as well as HMTF, are defendants in this action. 5 As will become important later, Viasystems in not a defendant.

HMTF, in addition to being a party to the Subscription Agreement, owned 49% of Viasystems common stock. When combined with defendants Mills and Conlon’s shares (which was effectuated by the voting agreement executed on the same day as the Subscription Agreement), HMTF controlled over 50% of the voting shares. In other words, HMTF held sufficient voting power as of July 19 to approve the warrant issuance. On October 19, 2001, the Company held a special meeting to vote on the warrants and, unsurprisingly, shareholders approved the issuance of the warrants. But less than half of the shares not controlled by HMTF were voted in favor of the transaction.

From the time the Subscription Agreement was approved until the time that shareholders voted to approve the warrants, Viasystems’ stock moved markedly downward. On July 19, the date of Board approval, the stock was valued at $3 per share. On October 5, the date of Viasys-tems’ final proxy statement regarding the special meeting held for shareholders to vote on the warrant issuance, the stock was valued at $0.44. Viasystems’ market capitalization had declined by over $300 million in that timeframe. By the fourth quarter of 2001, the Company’s ability to *1115 operate under the burden of its debt became increasingly difficult. In the first quarter of 2002, the Company retained an independent financial advisor to pursue debt-based restructuring. By April 2002, the New York Stock Exchange suspended trading of Viasystems’ stock due to its low share price and total market capitalization. 6 During the Company’s downward slide it was negotiating with its creditors to restructure and lessen its debt burden. On October 1, 2002, after negotiations with creditors ended, Viasystems filed a prepackaged bankruptcy in the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York on October 1, 2002.

Approving the Company’s restructuring plan, the Bankruptcy Court entered a Confirmation Order on January 14, 2003. The Confirmation Order eliminated the public stock of Viasystems for no consideration. Plaintiffs equity interest in the Company was eliminated, as was HMTF’s and the other defendants. Similarly, HMTF’s warrants were cancelled without consideration. The holders of Viasystems’ notes (ie., HMTF), however, received new stock in the Company in exchange for cancellation of those notes. Importantly for purposes of this Opinion,' the Confirmation Order also provided that the claims alleged in the original complaint in this action, filed before the Company entered bankruptcy proceedings, were the property of Viasystems and were released. 7

The Confirmation Order prompted the filing of the instant amended complaint purporting to assert individual claims against the defendants. Plaintiff alleges that the Subscription Agreement, through the warrant issuance, transferred voting control of Viasystems to HMTF without compensation to shareholders, caused a “lock-up” of the Company, and precluded the pursuit of other value-maximizing transactions. 8 Plaintiff contends that the claims in the amended complaint can be asserted individually because the Confirmation Order released Viasystems’ claims arising out of the financing transaction with HMTF. In other words, plaintiff argues that amended complaint states claims that belong to him independent of any claims the Company owned that were released by the Bankruptcy Court. Bearing this in mind, I turn to the task of ascertaining whether the claims are direct or derivative in nature. 9

II. LEGAL FRAMEWORK

A. Historical Development of Derivative Litigation

It is black-letter law that the board of directors of a Delaware corporation exercises all corporate powers and manages, or directs others in the management of, the business and affairs of the corporation. 10 One corporate power exercised by the board of directors is the con

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
845 A.2d 1110, 2004 WL 569353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agostino-v-hicks-delch-2004.