Bear, Stearns & Co. v. Anderson

519 A.2d 669, 1986 Del. Ch. LEXIS 428
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJune 10, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 519 A.2d 669 (Bear, Stearns & Co. v. Anderson) 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
Bear, Stearns & Co. v. Anderson, 519 A.2d 669, 1986 Del. Ch. LEXIS 428 (Del. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

ALLEN, Chancellor.

The pending motions to enjoin a proposed recapitalization of Anderson, Clayton & Co. (the “Company”) presently scheduled to be consummated today places in apparent opposition two important stockholder interests.

On plaintiffs’ view of the case this Court must now act to protect an interest each shareholder of the Company has in maximizing the present value of his or her stock-holdings. That important interest is threatened, on this view, by the imminent action of a self-intereSted board of directors to consummate the recapitalization and thereby preclude the Bear, Stearns/Gruss plaintiffs (“B/S/G”) from offering to shareholders an alternative transaction which those plaintiffs contend is worth substantially more per share.

On defendants’ view of the case, the stockholder interest importantly involved on this motion is an interest in stockholder sovereignty. That is, defendants contend that the shareholders — having overwhelmingly approved the recapitalization at their June 3, 1986 meeting called to vote on that proposal — have indicated their will and this Court has been shown no sufficient justification to insert any judgment of its own into the question what action is now appropriate in the best interests of the shareholders.

Accordingly, one is reminded at the outset that it frequently occurs in a legal analysis that to défine the relevant issue is the first and frequently the most important step in the process of determining, if not justifying, the judgment reached. In this instance, both perspectives suggested share a common ground, however; both critically rest upon an assertion, implied or expressed, concerning the meaning or effect of the recent shareholder vote. In thus struggling to determine whether this Court’s duty lies in acting decisively to try to protect the shareholders’ interests in possibly liquidating their stockholdings at what may be a substantially higher value than that offered to them in the recapitalization or rather whether the Court’s duty lies in according to the will of the shareholders preclusive deference, the critical issue relates to the circumstances surrounding that vote: were stockholders afforded the material information that they needed to make a knowledgeable choice and was that information presented in a manner, including in time, to permit informed choice and effective action by the board on that choice?

I.

The background of the present dispute, including a description of the proposed recapitalization, its evolution, the last-minute announcement by B/S/G of an alternative to the recapitalization that may be worth substantially more to shareholders, and a discussion of certain legal issues earlier treated, is contained in this Court’s opinions of June 2, 1986 and June 6, 1986 in these cases. See, In Re Anderson, Clayton Shareholders’ Litigation, Del.Ch., C.A. No. 8387, Allen, C. (June 2, 1986; June 6,1986), supra. Time does not permit a review of the complex factual matters set forth in those opinions. The facts that have developed since the May 27th date of the argument of an earlier preliminary injunction application in this case, however, will necessarily have to be sketched at least in outline.

A. Announcement of the B/S/G Proposal

The best advice available to the board when it adopted the proposed recapitalization and recommended it to the shareholders was that each existing shareholder [672]*672would receive in exchange for each current share, cash and securities worth between $43 and $47. Of that amount $37 would be cash, and under the proposed recapitalization would be distributable on a capital gains tax basis. The remaining consideration would be a portion of a share of new Common Stock of the Company. The board established June 3, 1986 as the date of a special meeting of stockholders called for the purpose of voting upon the recapitalization and on April 22, 1986 distributed to shareholders of record proxy solicitation materials.

On May 29, 1986 B/S/G, after having some preliminary discussions with management of Anderson, Clayton on the prior day, delivered to the President of the Company a letter stating that Bear, Stears & Co. and Gruss & Company “hereby submit an offer to acquire Anderson, Clayton & Co. in a cash merger transaction in which all shareholders of the Company would receive $54 in cash for each share ... owned....” The letter went on to state that B/S/G was “highly confident of the availability of the funding necessary to consummate the [proposed transaction] in an expeditious manner.”

The B/S/G letter disclosed that funding for that proposal would be derived in part from the consummation of an agreement that the letter stated had been reached in principle with the Quaker Oats Company for the purchase of Anderson, Clayton’s Gaines Foods, Inc. subsidiary and in part from bank financing that had not yet been finally committed to. The letter provided as well that “[c]onsummation of the [proposal] would be subject to abandonment of the Recapitalization, approval of the Company’s Board of Directors and shareholders, satisfaction of applicable regulatory requirements, execution of definitive funding agreements, and the execution of mutually acceptable definitive agreements with the Company and with The Quaker Oats Company.”

This proposal received a not altogether warm response. Management of the Company immediately issued a short press release stating in part:

“In response to the Bear, Stearns & Co. announcement earlier today, Anderson, Clayton & Co. said that a prompt board of directors meeting would be held to consider the matter. In the meantime, the Company cautioned that the proposal was tentative and did not recognize the fundamental difference between the pending recapitalization transaction in which the Company shareholders have a continuing equity interest and a sale of the entire company.”

The Company’s board met later in the day on May 29. The board of directors of Anderson, Clayton is presently comprised of sixteen members, eight of whom are officers of the Company and thus have an interest not only in maintaining their positions in the face of a possible change in control of the Company, but also a prospective financial interest in an ESOP that the recapitalization would establish. The remaining eight directors are neither officers of the Company nor are they otherwise financially interested in the recapitalization except in their status as stockholders. In all events, at its May 29th meeting the board took several steps. After hearing reports from its outside counsel and from a representative of the First Boston Corporation, its financial adviser with respect to the recapitalization, the board resolved that it was advisable and appropriate to continue with the pending recapitalization on its present schedule. The board also resolved:

“that members of management ... are hereby authorized to meet with representatives of the Bear, Stearns/Grass group and to seek to resolve the numerous uncertainties posed by the Bear, Stearns/Gruss letter proposal and in connection therewith to providé any information reasonably requested by the members of that group subject to appropriate confidentiality protection.”

Working over the weekend to prepare a proxy supplement relating to the dramatic, last-minute surfacing of a possible alterna[673]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Anderson, Clayton Shareholders'litigation
519 A.2d 669 (Court of Chancery of Delaware, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
519 A.2d 669, 1986 Del. Ch. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bear-stearns-co-v-anderson-delch-1986.