Agranoff v. Miller

791 A.2d 880, 2001 WL 536917
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedNovember 8, 2001
DocketCiv.A. 16795
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 791 A.2d 880 (Agranoff v. Miller) 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
Agranoff v. Miller, 791 A.2d 880, 2001 WL 536917 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINE, Vice Chancellor.

This opinion addresses the remand order of the Supreme Court that required this court to determine the price at which certain warrants held by Banker’s Trust (the ‘Warrants” or Warrant Shares”) could have been purchased by either plaintiff Citicorp Venture Capital, Ltd. (“CVC”) or EMS Corp. (“EMS”) in 1998. The Warrants were purchased in autumn 1998 by defendant Edward M. Miller as part of Miller’s conspiracy with EMS director and president John Ovens, Jr. to acquire control of EMS through a variety of inequitable and deceptive tactics. These tactics included multiple breaches of EMS’s and CVC’s contractual rights to purchase other EMS shares, fraud on the EMS board by Ovens with Miller’s approval and knowledge, and the illicit use of EMS inside information by Miller that was funneled to him by Ovens without EMS board approval. In the case of the BT Warrants, Miller and Ovens worked together to ensure that BT would sell them to Miller, even though Ovens was supposed to be assisting EMS in negotiating an extension of those Warrants at the time he was instead operating as an agent of Miller’s secret takeover plan. Thus, Miller’s purchase of the Warrants was held to result from the usurpation of a corporate opportunity belonging to EMS. 1

The remand order requires this court to determine the hypothetical price at which EMS and CVC could have purchased the Warrants from BT. 2 In this opinion, I interpret the Supreme Court’s order as requiring me to determine the fair market value of the BT Warrants in accordance with standard valuation techniques, recognizing that Miller’s pattern of illicit conduct makes it impossible to determine what the Warrants would have been sold for in a market untainted by his multiple violations of EMS’s and CVC’s rights. After examining the testimony of the parties’ experts, I conclude that the fair market value of the BT Warrants as of the valuation date of October 1998 was $41.02. In the event that I have misinterpreted the mandate of the Supreme Court and it wished me to come up with a fair value appraisal award, I conclude that the fair *882 value of the BT Warrants as of the valuation date was $51.13.

I. The Business Of EMS

EMS is a transportation delivery service business. A basic description of its status as of 1998 follows.

EMS is a holding company for 62% of the stock of Express Messenger Systems, Inc. (“Express”). The remaining 38% of Express is owned by Air Canada.

Express has three major business operations. The first, Express Messenger, is an express delivery and courier business operating in several western American cities. The second, Express Mail, operates as an international “remailer.” This means that Express Mail picks up bulk mail by messenger, transports it overseas, and injects the mail into local delivery systems or arranges for hand delivery of it. The third and final operation, California Overnight, is an overnight delivery business focusing on business-to-business deliveries in California. California Overnight originally exploited a niche for late pickups of next-day packages in California that was not being filled by national delivery companies, because of time zone issues. That advantage has disappeared, and California Oversight now faces both national and local competition.

Express enjoyed relatively strong revenue growth during the latter part of the 1990s, with revenues expanding from $21.8 million in fiscal year 1995 to $50.3 million in fiscal year 1998. During that same period, California Overnight’s share of Express’s revenues grew from 35.8% to 65.2%. This shift was intentional and reflected Express’s decision to use California Overnight as its principal engine for growth.

While Express’s sales growth was strong during this period, its ability to derive profits from its revenues was less impressive. Although Express was generally profitable, its net profits fluctuated and its net profit margins required great improvement. Moreover, management had a less than impressive track record of meeting its profit projections. While management had focussed on revenue growth, it recognized that the company had to increase its ability to turn those revenues into profits and that the company faced vigorous competition that limited its ability to do that. Nonetheless, as of 1998, the company’s management believed that Express had the potential for profitable growth.

II. Procedural Background

This case was brought under 8 Del. C. § 225 by plaintiffs L. David Callaway, III, Stuart Agranoff, and CVC against defendants Edward M. Miller and William A. DeLorenzo. The inspiration for the action was the November, 1998 ouster of Calla-way and Agranoff from the board of EMS at the behest of Miller, who claimed to have bought majority control of EMS legitimately. At the time they were removed, Callaway and Agranoff comprised two members of EMS’s three member board. Miller’s co-conspirator John Ovens was the third member of the board, as well as EMS’s president. At that time, Calla-way was EMS’s chief executive officer and Ovens’s management superior. Before Miller came on the scene, CVC controlled over 49% of EMS’s then outstanding shares, and nearly 35% of EMS’s equity on a fully diluted basis that assumed conversion of the BT Warrants into EMS shares.

Miller’s conduct obviously upset CVC, which had controlled EMS before Miller’s attempt to remove Callaway and Agranoff. More relevantly as a legal matter, CVC was party to a shareholders’ agreement (the “first refusal contract”) that gave EMS and then CVC rights of first refusal to purchase the shares of EMS held by *883 other stockholders. 3 The evidence at trial revealed that Miller had tortiously interfered with the first refusal contract in buying his non-BT EMS Shares.

Perhaps most disturbingly, Miller had done so in league with Ovens, and EMS’s chief financial officer, Peter Simpson. The three of them engaged in a concerted plan to help Miller acquire control of EMS through covert activities concealed from Agranoff and Callaway. Ovens and Simpson provided Miller with access to confidential company information without board authorization. Ovens and Simpson also actively concealed Miller’s activity from Agranoff and Callaway. Miller, Ovens, and Simpson started this activity after learning that Callaway was battling life-threatening cancer.

As a result of this concealed conduct, Miller was able to purchase 23,060 shares from minority stockholders of EMS at prices ranging from $24 to $30 a share during the period June 11,1998 to September 15, 1998. 4 This gave him approximately 14% of EMS’s shares on a fully diluted basis, and 21% before the exercise of the BT Warrants.

To obtain a safe majority of EMS’s shares, Miller had to purchase many more shares. Two other sources of shares existed. One was a group of stockholders who collectively held over 15% of EMS’s shares on a fully diluted basis. The bulk of these shares, some 21,550 5

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Bluebook (online)
791 A.2d 880, 2001 WL 536917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agranoff-v-miller-delch-2001.