Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. v. Airgas, Inc.

16 A.3d 48, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 15, 2011
DocketCivil Action 5249-CC, 5256-CC
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 16 A.3d 48 (Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. v. Airgas, Inc.) 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
Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. v. Airgas, Inc., 16 A.3d 48, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22 (Del. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

CHANDLER, Chancellor

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*54 [[Image here]]

This case poses the following fundamental question: Can a board of directors, acting in good faith and with a reasonable factual basis for its decision, when faced with a structurally non-coercive, all-cash, fully financed tender offer directed to the stockholders of the corporation, keep a poison pill in place so as to prevent the stockholders from making their own decision about whether they want to tender their shares — even after the incumbent board has lost one election contest, a full year has gone by since the offer was first made public, and the stockholders are fully informed as to the target board’s views on the inadequacy of the offer? If so, does that effectively mean that a board can “just say never” to a hostile tender offer?

The answer to the latter question is “no.” A board cannot “just say no” to a tender offer. Under Delaware law, it must first pass through two prongs of exacting judicial scrutiny by a judge who will evaluate the actions taken by, and the motives of, the board. Only a board of directors found to be acting in good faith, after reasonable investigation and reliance on the advice of outside advisors, which articulates and convinces the Court that a hostile tender offer poses a legitimate threat to the corporate enterprise, may address that perceived threat by blocking the tender offer and forcing the bidder to elect a board majority that supports its bid.

In essence, this case brings to the fore one of the most basic questions animating all of corporate law, which relates to the allocation of power between directors and stockholders. That is, “when, if ever, will a board’s duty to ‘the corporation and its shareholders’ require [the board] to abandon concerns for ‘long term’ values (and other constituencies) and enter a current share value maximizing mode?” 1 More to the point, in the context of a hostile tender offer, who gets to decide when and if the corporation is for sale?

*55 Since the Shareholder Rights Plan (more commonly known as the “poison pill”) was first conceived and throughout the development of Delaware corporate takeover jurisprudence during the twenty-five-plus years that followed, the debate over who ultimately decides whether a tender offer is adequate and should be accepted — the shareholders of the corporation or its board of directors — has raged on. Starting with Moran v. Household International, Inc. 2 in 1985, when the Delaware Supreme Court first upheld the adoption of the poison pill as a valid takeover defense, through the hostile takeover years of the 1980s, and in several recent decisions of the Court of Chancery and the Delaware Supreme Court, 3 this fundamental question has engaged practitioners, academics, and members of the judiciary, but it has yet to be confronted head on.

For the reasons much more fully described in the remainder of this Opinion, I conclude that, as Delaware law currently stands, the answer must be that the power to defeat an inadequate hostile tender offer ultimately lies with the board of directors. As such, I find that the Airgas board has met its burden under Unocal to articulate a legally cognizable threat (the allegedly inadequate price of Air Products’ offer, coupled with the fact that a majority of Airgas’s stockholders would likely tender into that inadequate offer) and has taken defensive measures that fall within a range of reasonable responses proportionate to that threat. I thus rule in favor of defendants. Air Products’ and the Shareholder Plaintiffs’ requests for relief are denied, and all claims asserted against defendants are dismissed with prejudice. 4

INTRODUCTION

This is the Court’s decision after trial, extensive post-trial briefing, and a supplemental evidentiary hearing in this long-running takeover battle between Air Products & Chemicals, Inc. (“Air Products”) and Airgas, Inc. (“Airgas”). The now very public saga began quietly in mid-October 2009 when John McGlade, President and CEO of Air Products, privately approached Peter McCausland, founder and CEO of Airgas, about a potential acquisition or combination. After McGlade’s private advances were rebuffed, Air Products went hostile in February 2010, launching a public tender offer for all outstanding Air-gas shares.

Now, over a year since Air Products first announced its all-shares, all-cash tender offer, the terms of that offer (other than price) remain essentially unchanged. 5 After several price bumps and extensions, the offer currently stands at $70 per share and is set to expire today, February 15, 2011 — Air Products’ stated “best and final” offer. The Airgas board unanimously rejected that offer as being “clearly inadequate.” 6 The Airgas board has repeatedly *56 expressed the view that Airgas is worth at least $78 per share in a sale transaction— and at any rate, far more than the $70 per share Air Products is offering.

So, we are at a crossroads. Air Products has made its “best and final” offer— apparently its offer to acquire Airgas has reached an end stage. Meanwhile, the Airgas board believes the offer is clearly inadequate and its value in a sale transaction is at least $78 per share. At this stage, it appears, neither side will budge. Airgas continues to maintain its defenses, blocking the bid and effectively denying shareholders the choice whether to tender their shares. Air Products and Shareholder Plaintiffs now ask this Court to order Airgas to redeem its poison pill and other defenses that are stopping Air Products from moving forward with its hostile offer, and to allow Airgas’s stockholders to decide for themselves whether they want to tender into Air Products’ (inadequate or not) $70 “best and final” offer.

A week-long trial in this case was held from October 4, 2010 through October 8, 2010. Hundreds of pages of post-trial memoranda were submitted by the parties. After trial, several legal, factual, and evi-dentiary questions remained to be answered. In ruling on certain outstanding evidentiary issues, I sent counsel a Letter Order on December 2, 2010 asking for answers to a number of questions to be addressed in supplemental post-trial briefing. On the eve of the parties’ submissions to the Court in response to that Letter Order, Air Products raised its offer to the $70 “best and final” number. At that point, defendants vigorously opposed a ruling based on the October trial record, suggesting that the entire trial (indeed, the entire case) was moot because the October trial predominantly focused on the Airgas board’s response to Air Products’ then-$65.50 offer and the board’s decision to keep its defenses in place with respect to that offer. Defendants further suggested that any ruling with respect to the $70 offer was not ripe because the board had not yet met to consider that offer.

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Bluebook (online)
16 A.3d 48, 2011 Del. Ch. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/air-products-chemicals-inc-v-airgas-inc-delch-2011.