Allenson v. Midway Airlines Corp.

789 A.2d 572, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 89, 2001 WL 811971
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJuly 6, 2001
DocketC.A. 15734-NC
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 789 A.2d 572 (Allenson v. Midway Airlines Corp.) 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
Allenson v. Midway Airlines Corp., 789 A.2d 572, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 89, 2001 WL 811971 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

JACOBS, Vice Chancellor.

This is the decision of the Court, after a trial based on stipulated facts, adjudicating the merits of this statutory appraisal proceeding. The parties present a single issue that arises out of the core facts next summarized.

The corporation that is the subject of this appraisal is in dire financial condition. It cannot avoid bankruptcy without a sub *573 stantial infusion of new capital. The only person willing to invest that capital is an unrelated party, but it will invest but only if two conditions are met. First, the corporation’s key creditors must agree to certain operational cost concessions in an amount satisfactory to the outside investor (“the Concessions”). Second, the corporation’s majority stockholder must also agree (i) to invest new capital, as well as forgive certain debts that the corporation owed the majority stockholder, as well as (ii) relinquish certain of the majority stockholder’s other claims against the corporation.

The majority stockholder, the corporation’s key creditors, and the outside investor reached an agreement that would accomplish those conditions. The agreement contemplates a recapitalization that will take the form of a merger of the corporation into a new entity. Sixty-seven percent (67%) of the equity of the merged entity would be owned by the outside investor, and twenty-two percent (22%) would be owned by the majority stockholder. The public shareholders would not participate in the merged entity. Instead, they would be “cashed out” for nominal consideration — $0.01 per share. The agreements to grant the Concessions, although in place before the effective date of the merger, expressly make the Concessions contingent upon, and operative only if and when, the merger becomes effective.

If the Concessions are included in determining the corporation’s “fair value” under 8 Del. C. § 262, then “fair value” would exceed the $0.01 per share merger price. The sole issue presented is whether, in these circumstances, the Concessions are an “element of value” that may be considered in determining the corporation’s statutory fair value on the date of the merger. For the reasons set forth in this Opinion, I conclude that they cannot be.

I. RELEVANT FACTS

What follows is a summary of the relevant facts to which the parties have stipulated. On February 11,1997, Midway Airlines Corporation, a Delaware corporation (“Midway” or “the Company”), merged with and into Good Aero, Inc. (“GoodAe-ro”), a Delaware corporation specially formed for purposes of the merger by Messrs. James A. Goodnight, Ph.D. (“Goodnight”) and John P. Sail (“Sail”). On that date, the Company also mailed a notice to its stockholders, advising them that the merger had become effective on February 11, 1997, and that each of their shares had been converted into the right to receive $0.01 per share cash. The petitioners are holders of Midway’s Prior Preferred, Junior Preferred and Class C shares. They commenced this appraisal proceeding, contending that the merger consideration was inadequate because it failed to include relevant elements of fair value — namely, the Concessions — as required by 8 Del. C. § 262(h) and Delaware decisional law. 1

A. Background

Formed in 1993, Midway initially provided air service from a base at Midway Airport in Chicago, Illinois, and operated as a high volume discount, all-coach carrier. In 1994, Midway became financially distressed and was recapitalized by the Zell/Chilmark Fund, L.P. (“Z/C”) making a $25 million investment. In exchange, Z/C received shares of Midway Prior Preferred and Class A Common stock, with the re- *574 suit that Z/C owned 96.6% of Midway’s Prior Preferred and 87.1% of the Company’s Class A shares on a fully diluted basis.

On March 2, 1995, Midway moved its operations to Raleigh-Durham International Airport, and changed its focus from providing high volume discount flights to offering premium, full-fare airline service to business travelers from the new Raleigh-Durham Airport base. To facilitate its growth in this new direction, Midway entered into agreements with Airbus Industries and AVSA, S.A.R.L. (collectively, “Airbus”) to purchase four Airbus A320 aircraft outright, and for an option to purchase four more A320 aircraft at specified future delivery dates. Midway also leased a fifth Airbus A320, and acquired six additional Fokker F100 aircraft, from Kawasaki Aircraft Leasing (“Kawaski”). By mid-1995, this expanded fleet enabled Midway to provide airline services to several major metropolitan cities on the east coast, as well as Las Vegas, Los Angeles and Cancún, Mexico.

In May 1995, Z/C and other stockholders invested an additional $6 million of capital in Midway. In exchange, they received subordinated notes having a face value of $6 million due in April 2002. Even with that capital infusion, the Company had exhausted its operating cash by December 1995. In late 1995, anticipating cash flow shortages in 1996, Midway began negotiating with its key creditors and vendors, including American Airlines, Inc. (“AMR”), debis AirFinance B.V. (“debis”) and Airbus (collectively, the “Key Creditors”), to defer debt payments the Company was obligated to make to those creditors. Midway sought the deferrals to give itself sufficient time to engage in a capital-generating transaction.

B. Midway Negotiates The 1996 Spring Deferrals With Its Key Creditors

After months of intense negotiations, the Key Creditors granted deferrals to Midway in early 1996 (the “1996 Spring Deferrals”). In April 1996, AMR agreed to defer a total of $6 million until September 30, 1996, for which Midway surrendered substantially all of its assets to collateralize the deferred debt.

As a condition to participating in the 1996 Spring Deferrals, AMR demanded that Midway’s other Key Creditors grant similar deferrals. AMR also demanded that Z/C invest an additional $4 million in exchange for new Midway subordinated securities, and defer any interest and dividends on those securities until September 30, 1996. Z/C agreed to, and did, invest the additional $4 million in Midway in exchange for additional subordinated notes of Midway.

In January 1996, Midway management also met with representatives of debis (the creditor that was leasing the Fokker F100 aircraft to Midway) to negotiate deferrals of certain lease payments on those aircraft, debis agreed to defer the February, March and April 1996 aircraft lease payments, and to refinance the December 1995 and January 1996 lease payments. Like AMR, debis conditioned its deferrals upon similar deferrals by Midway’s other Key Creditors.

Thus, in the 1996 Spring Deferrals Midway obtained $4 million in additional capital from Z/C, and obtained significant debt deferrals from its Key Creditors and vendors. Unfortunately, even the Spring 1996 Deferrals offered the Company only short-term relief from its financial difficulties.

C. Midway Negotiates For Additional Deferrals While Seeking New Capital

In June 1996, the Company’s outside auditor issued its audit report of Midway’s

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Bluebook (online)
789 A.2d 572, 2001 Del. Ch. LEXIS 89, 2001 WL 811971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allenson-v-midway-airlines-corp-delch-2001.